Organic-inorganic ternary nanohybrids consisting of oxidized-single walled carbon nanohorns-SnO-polyvinylpyrrolidone (ox-SWCNH/SnO/PVP) with stoichiometry 1/1/1 and 2/1/1 and ox-SWCNH/ZnO/PVP = 5/2/1 and 5/3/2 (all mass ratios) were synthesized and characterized as sensing films of chemiresistive test structures for ethanol vapor detection in dry air, in the range from 0 up to 50 mg/L. All the sensing films had an ox-SWCNH concentration in the range of 33.3-62.5 wt%. A comparison between the transfer functions and the response and recovery times of these sensing devices has shown that the structures with ox-SWCNH/SnO/PVP = 1/1/1 have the highest relative sensitivities of 0.0022 (mg/L), while the devices with ox-SWCNH/SnO/PVP = 2/1/1 have the lowest response time (15 s) and recovery time (50 s) for a room temperature operation, proving the key role of carbonic material in shaping the static and dynamic performance of the sensor. These response and recovery times are lower than those of "heated" commercial sensors. The sensing mechanism is explained in terms of the overall response of a p-type semiconductor, where ox-SWCNH percolated between electrodes of the sensor, shunting the heterojunctions made between n-type SnO or ZnO and p-type ox-SWCNH. The hard-soft acid-base (HSAB) principle supports this mechanism. The low power consumption of these devices, below 2 mW, and the sensing performances at room temperature may open new avenues towards ethanol sensors for passive samplers of environment monitoring, alcohol test portable instruments and wireless network sensors for Internet of Things applications.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7766401PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nano10122552DOI Listing

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