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Natural Carbonized Sugar as a Low-Temperature Ammonia Sensor Material: Experimental, Theoretical, and Computational Studies. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Carbonized sugar (CS) was created using a microwave-assisted method, which is considered cost-effective and environmentally friendly, and its characteristics were analyzed, including morphology and porosity.
  • - The CS demonstrated effective gas-sensing abilities, with a notable response to liquid ammonia, reaching 50% at 80 °C for a concentration of 100 ppm, along with specific response and recovery times of 180 and 216 seconds.
  • - The study also explored how relative humidity affects the CS sensor's performance, showing response rates between 16% and 62% across a humidity range of 20% to 100%.

Article Abstract

Carbonized sugar (CS) has been synthesized via microwave-assisted carbonization of market-quality tabletop sugar bearing in mind the advantages of this synthesis method, such as being useful, cost-effective, and eco-friendly. The as-prepared CS has been characterized for its morphology, phase purity, type of porosity, pore-size distribution, and so on. The gas-sensing properties of CS for various oxidizing and reducing gases are demonstrated at ambient temperature, where we observe good selectivity toward liquid ammonia among other gases. The highest ammonia response (50%) of a CS-based sensor was noted at 80 °C for 100 ppm concentration. The response and recovery times of the CS sensor are 180 and 216 s, respectively. This unveiling ammonia-sensing study is explored through a plausible theoretical mechanism, which is further well-supported by computational modeling performed using density function theory. The effect of relative humidity on the CS sensor has also been studied at ambient temperature, which demonstrated that the minimum and maximum (20-100%) relative humidity values revealed 16 and 62% response, respectively.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsami.7b13122DOI Listing

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