ϟ
 
DOI: 10.1021/ic400109j
OpenAccess: Closed
This work is not Open Acccess. We may still have a PDF, if this is the case there will be a green box below.

Porous Titania with Heavily Self-Doped Ti<sup>3+</sup> for Specific Sensing of CO at Room Temperature

Juan Su,Xiaoxin Zou,Yongcun Zou,Guodong Li,Peipei Wang,Jie‐Sheng Chen

Doping
Dopant
Porosity
2013
Semiconductor-based sensors have played an important role in efficient detection of combustible, flammable, and toxic gases, but they usually need to operate at elevated temperatures (200 °C or higher). Although reducing the operation temperature down to room temperature is of practical significance, it is still a huge challenge to fabricate room temperature sensors with a low cost. Here we show a novel “self-doping” strategy to overcome simultaneously both difficulties of “high resistance” and “low reaction rate”, which have always been encountered for room-temperature operation of semiconductor-based sensors. In particular, a porous crystalline titania with heavily self-doped Ti3+ species has been prepared by using a porous amorphous TiO2 and urea as the starting materials. The resulting Ti3+ self-doped TiO2 material serves as an efficient room-temperature gas-sensing material for specific CO detection with fast response/recovery. The self-dopant (Ti3+) in the titania material has proved to decrease the resistance of TiO2 significantly on the one hand and to increase the chemisorbed oxygen species substantially, thus enhancing the surface reaction activity on the other. Such a self-doping concept is anticipated to give a fresh impetus to rational design of room-temperature sensing devices with low costs.
Loading...
    Cite this:
Generate Citation
Powered by Citationsy*
    Porous Titania with Heavily Self-Doped Ti<sup>3+</sup> for Specific Sensing of CO at Room Temperature” is a paper by Juan Su Xiaoxin Zou Yongcun Zou Guodong Li Peipei Wang Jie‐Sheng Chen published in 2013. It has an Open Access status of “closed”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.