Developing highly efficient semiconductor metal oxide (SMOX) sensors capable of accurate and fast responses to environmental humidity is still a challenging task. In addition to a not so pronounced sensitivity to relative humidity change, most of the SMOXs cannot meet the criteria of real-time humidity sensing due to their long response/recovery time. The way to tackle this problem is to control adsorption/desorption processes, i.e., water-vapor molecular dynamics, over the sensor's active layer through the powder and pore morphology design. With this in mind, a KIT-5-mediated synthesis was used to achieve mesoporous tin (IV) oxide replica (SnO-R) with controlled pore size and ordering through template inversion and compared with a sol-gel synthesized powder (SnO-SG). Unlike SnO-SG, SnO-R possessed a high specific surface area and quite an open pore structure, similar to the KIT-5, as observed by TEM, BET and SWAXS analyses. According to TEM, SnO-R consisted of fine-grained globular particles and some percent of exaggerated, grown twinned crystals. The distinctive morphology of the SnO-R-based sensor, with its specific pore structure and an increased number of oxygen-related defects associated with the powder preparation process and detected at the sensor surface by XPS analysis, contributed to excellent humidity sensing performances at room temperature, comprised of a low hysteresis error (3.7%), sensitivity of 406.8 kΩ/RH% and swift response/recovery speed (4 s/6 s).
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9961371 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules28041754 | DOI Listing |
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