The sensitive detection of toxic flammable volatile organics using low cost efficient sensors is important for ensuring both indoor and outdoor safety. It is essential for chemical sensors to exhibit a significantly stronger response to target analytes compared to equivalent amounts of analogous competing chemicals. In line with this importance, current work evaluated the performance of ZnSnO, a n-type semiconducting metal oxide, for sensing -butanol in comparison to methanol, ethanol, and propanol vapours. These vapours fall within the category of aliphatic alcohols but vary in characteristics such as molecular weight, vapour pressure, volatility, and diffusivity. In this work we have explored the sensor's performance by adjusting the operating temperature over the range of 225-300 °C while detecting 1000 ppm of each of these vapours. Efforts were made to establish a correlation between the sensor's responses with the interactions of these vapours on the sensor's surface. Prior to assessing the sensing characteristics of the solid-state-route-derived ZnSnO, its structural characteristics, including phase purity, crystalline structure, bonding patterns, morphology, and defect characteristics, were studied. This comprehensive analysis sheds light on the potential of ZnSnO as an effective sensor for detecting -butanol.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3cp05178aDOI Listing

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