Shaofeng Shao*a,
Hongyan Wua,
Fan Jianga,
Shimin Wanga,
Tao Wua,
Yating Leia,
Ralf Koehnb and
Wei-Feng Raoa
aDepartment of Materials Physics, School of Physics and Optoelectronic Engineering, Nanjing University of Information Science & Technology, Nanjing, China. E-mail: ssfshao@nuist.edu.cn; Fax: +86-025-58731031; Tel: +86-025-58731031
bDepartment of Chemistry & Biochemistry, University of Munich, Munich, Germany
First published on 29th January 2016
Gas sensing with ordered nanoporous materials is achieving much attention because of its promising capability of detecting toxic gases at room temperature. In this work, an ordered nanoporous Pt-SnO2 sensing film is fabricated in situ on a sensing device using a block polymer template and is applied as a chemiresistive toluene gas sensor. Post synthetic hydrothermal treatment was developed for the synthesis of the ordered Pt-SnO2 sensing films with homogeneous and controlled film thickness and controllable pore size. The structure, crystallinity and composition of the ordered nanoporous Pt-SnO2 thin films are characterized by HRTEM, FESEM, SAED, and STEM. Interestingly, the Pt-SnO2 nanoporous film, an n-type material, presents tunable sensing behaviour with switching from p- to n-type toluene sensing performance as a function of the platinum content and calcination temperature. The ordered nanoporous sensing film is capable of detecting low levels of toluene, as low as 10 ppm, at room temperature, and shows good stability. Furthermore, a transition diagram has been created on the basis of the toluene sensing response, which can be used to design the p–n transitions.
In recent years, the detect of trace levels of toluene has been reported using semiconducting metal oxide sensors based on a rich variety of nanostructures, such as nanoparticles, nanowires, nanoneedles, and nano-size films.8,11–13 Among these, ordered nanoporous metal oxides thin films have proved to be of great value in gas sensing applications.14,15 Ordered nanoporous structure leads to increased surface area, richer surface active sites, strong adsorption of the target gas molecules, and thereby to enhanced sensing performance. Kim et al. developed a nanoimprinting method for the fabrication of sensor device to produce the porous sensing film, which was able to detect VOCs vapour at room temperature.16 However, the fabricated gas sensors presented poor sensing performance. In our previous studies, we have developed an efficient approach for synthesis of ordered crystalline nanoporous metal oxide such as post-synthetic water vapour hydrothermal treatment.17 It allows the synthesis of metal oxide thin films with ordered nanopores at low temperature. Furthermore, crystalline pore walls can be achieved at low temperatures allowing an easy thermal removal of the template by calcination without significant shrinkage of the thin film normal to substrate. Therefore, the post-synthetic hydrothermal treatment would provide an effective way to research the effect mechanism of nanostructured ordering, nanopore size, and particle size of nanoporous metal oxides on their corresponding application property. However, the further application of metal oxide with post-synthetic hydrothermal treatment on gas sensor is necessary.
Crucial efforts have been concentrated to ameliorate the recognition ability of ordered metal oxide sensors, usually by doping or surface modification.18,19 Recently, the discovery of transitions from p- to n-type gas sensing presents a new and promising way for gas discrimination.14,20–24 The n- or p-type gas sensing relates to the increase or decrease of sensor resistance upon exposure to an oxidizing gas. To date, the regulable transition of metal oxide materials sensing behaviour from p-type to n-type were induced by treatment in the operation temperature and the concentration of the reducing gas. For instance, Huang et al.21 reported a ZnO-modified SnO2 sensor revealing concentration-dependent n–p–n transitions in the sensing response to reducing gas; Wang et al.25 exhibited temperature and concentration-dependent n–p transition performance in hydrothermally synthesized ZnO nanotube arrays. Dai et al.14 synthesized a honeycomb-like Fe2O3 porous sensing film demonstrating abnormal sensing behaviour with reversible switching from p- to n-type NO2 sensing tuned by the NO2 concentration (C) and working temperature (T). However, the mechanism and controllability of such p–n transitions of SnO2-based sensors at room temperature are rarely investigated and remain challenging to understand.
In this work, an ordered nanoporous Pt-SnO2 sensing film is synthesized in situ on a sensing device using a block polymer template and is evaluated as a chemiresistive toluene gas sensor. The post synthetic hydrothermal treatment was developed for the synthesis of the ordered Pt-SnO2 sensing films with homogeneous and controlled film thickness and the controllable pore size. The structure, crystallinity and composition of the ordered nanoporous Pt-SnO2 thin films are characterized by HRTEM, FESEM, SAED, and STEM. Interestingly, the SnO2 nanoporous film, an n-type material, demonstrates sensing behaviour with reversible switching from p- to n-type toluene sensing performance. Further, a transition diagram has been created on the basis of the toluene sensing responses, which can be used to design and tailor the p–n transitions.
SAXRD patterns of the thin films were taken on an XDS-2000 diffractometer (Scintag Inc.) using Cu K radiation. WAXRD data were obtained by a Bruker D8 Advance X-ray diffractometer with Cu Kα (0.15406 nm) radiation. Field-emission scanning electron microscopy (FE-SEM, Hitachi S-4800) was used to observe the morphologies of the sensing films. Nitrogen sorption measurements were carried out at 77 K using a NOVA 4000e (Quantachrome Instruments) on Pt doped tin oxides scratched from several films. High resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) and scanning transmission electron microscopy in high angle annular dark field mode (STEM-HAADF) were performed using a FEI Titan 80–300 equipped with a field emission gun operated at 300 kV; film parts were scratched from the substrate and collected on an amorphous holey carbon film on a copper grid. XPS spectra were recorded using a Kratos Axis Ultra DLD spectrometer employing a monochromated Al-Kα X-ray source (hv = 1486.6 eV), hybrid (magnetic/electrostatic) optics and a multi-channel plate and delay line detector (DLD). Surface charging was corrected by referencing the spectra to C–C state of the C 1s peak at binding energy at 284.6 eV. All XPS spectra were recorded using an aperture slot of 300 × 700 microns, survey spectra were recorded with a pass energy of 160 eV, and high resolution spectra with a pass energy of 40 eV.
Fig. 1 Small-angle XRD patterns of nanoporous Pt-SnO2 thin films synthesized after 95 °C hydrothermal treatment and annealing at 100 °C, 200 °C, 300 °C, 400 °C and 500 °C. |
Sinturel et al.26 reported that the SVA process develops the synthesis of the block polymer thin films where the self-assembled pattern is used to create surface topography or chemical composition variation for application. However, the block polymer films produced at rapid solvent evaporation rates are “kinetically constrained” in a disordered arrangement. The post synthetic water vapour hydrothermal treatment in this work could solve the above problem. More importantly, this method allows us to construct ordered nanoporous architectures with different nanoparticle size and composition of the Pt on the film surface.
The calcination effect for the synthesis of Pt-SnO2 with varied nanoporous ordering and surface composition can be clearly observed from the high resolution SEM images show in Fig. 2. When the calcination temperature is low, for example, 200 °C, the pore size of sensing film is very small and the Pt content on the film is high, as shown in the insert image of Fig. 2A, which introduces a tight connection between PtOx particles on the surface of sensing film. With the increase of calcination temperature to 300 °C, this leads to the formation of partly regular nanopores on the film surface. One can see that the 400 °C calcined sensing film is highly ordered with regular nanopores. However, the Pt content of the sensing films drops dramatically from 12 at% to 3 at%. Thermogravimetry analysis was carried out not only to clarify the thermal stability of the scratched films with post synthetic hydrothermal treatment but also to determine the nature of the remaining template and the calcination temperature required to eliminate the template. The TG curve depicted in ESI, Fig. S1† shows the change in the mass of the scratched films between 40 and 800 °C under an air flow. The TG curve presents the mass loss occurring in two main successive steps of 12.4 (centered at 184.5 °C) and 9.1 (centered at 225.5 °C) to give a final residue of 78.5%. Moreover, no significant weight loss is detected above 350 °C, indicating that organic templates are eliminated at this temperature. As a consequence, the first decomposition step can be attributed to the elimination of adsorbed water, whereas the main step at higher temperature (225.5 °C) is related to the thermal degradation of the organic template. The results are in good agreement with the SEM measurement.
Fig. 2 (A), (B), and (C) FESEM images of the 200 °C, 300 °C, and 400 °C annealed ordered nanoporous Pt-SnO2 film. The top right insets of images A and C are EDX mapping analysis of Pt-LA. |
XRD patterns of heat-treated Pt-doped SnO2 sensing films are shown in Fig. 3. The peak position and relative intensity of all diffraction peaks for the products match standard powder diffraction data (JCPDS 41-1445). The XRD patterns of 100 °C heat-treated Pt-SnO2 thin films exhibits three discrete hkl reflection at 26.6°, 33.9°, and 51.8°, respectively, corresponding to the (110), (101), and (211) crystallographic planes of tetragonal SnO2 in accordance with the synthetic cassiterite. All diffraction peaks in Fig. 3 became stronger and sharper with the higher heat treatments. When the calcination temperature is up to 400 °C, the XRD patterns of sensing films exhibits five discrete hkl reflection at 26.6°, 33.9°, 38.0°, 51.8°, and 54.8°, respectively, corresponding to the (110), (101), (200), (211) and (220) crystallographic planes of tetragonal SnO2. No characteristic peaks belonging to other SnO2 crystals or impurities were detected. The average crystalline grain size (D) calculated from the full width at half-maximum, FWHM, of the (110) reflection line using the Scherrer formula, [the average crystallite size (Ds) was obtained by Ds = 0.9λ/(Bcosθ), where λ is the wavelength of X-ray (λCu = 0.15418 nm) and B is the full-width at half-maximum of the XRD peak centered at 2θ degrees], is 1.6 nm for the 100 °C heat-treated Pt-SnO2 thin film, 2.4 nm for the 200 °C heat-treated thin film, 3.0 nm for the 300 °C heat-treated thin film, 3.8 nm for the 400 °C heat-treated thin film, and 5.2 nm for the 500 °C heat-treated thin film. However, peaks of Pt phase cannot be seen in these patterns due to possibly to the absence of crystalline PtOx aggregated particles.
Fig. 3 Wide-angle XRD patterns of nanoporous Pt-SnO2 thin films synthesized after 95 °C hydrothermal treatment and annealing at 100 °C, 200 °C, 300 °C, 400 °C and 500 °C. |
Fig. 4 shows the evolution of Raman spectra versus the treatment temperature for Pt doped SnO2 sensing films. Spectra of 200 °C heat-treated sensing film exhibits around the A1g mode a broad feature attributed to surface modes,27 whereas the Raman bands measured at 212, 235, and 344 cm−1 were not detected in the bulk SnO2. Liu et al.28 have reported, besides the expected Eg and A1g bands, Raman bands located at 212 and 235 cm−1 in SnO2 nanomaterials, which were attributed to Eu (TO) and Eu (LO) active modes. It is reasonable to assign the two volume modes to IR modes whose Raman activities are induced by the size effect, which are due to the smaller diameter of SnO2 nanoparticles. The third broad peak at 344 cm−1 is also due to an active mode from the inactive Eu mode. This attributes to relaxation of Raman selection rule by reduction the particle size to several nanometers, also by the high concentration of defects in surface site such as oxygen vacancies (VOs) and lattice disorder.29 The other peculiarity of Raman spectra of nanocrystalline SnO2 is the broad feature between 400 and 700 cm−1, called band of the surface modes. The origin of these bands has been connected to the low particle dimension of the materials. Dieguez et al.30 proposed that surface modes were due to the existence of a lattice softening taking place in the outer part of the grain. On the other hand, studies of nanocrystalline tin oxide reactivity have shown that the relative intensity of surface bands depends strongly on the interactions with gases, which can modify the outer layer of the gain.31 For 400 °C heat-treated sensing film, the three detectable Raman active modes of tin oxide have been observed: Eg (476 cm−1), A1g (627 cm−1), and B2g (766 cm−1). Two other bands are observed at 241, and 288 cm−1, together with broad feature located at the region 310–350 cm−1 due to the particle size increase during the calcination process. It corroborates that the calcination process has significantly influence on the nanostructure of the materials, especially on the surface modes.
As shown in ESI, Fig. S2,† the interdigitated-finger arrays on the sensor device are clearly observed; the electrodes contain twenty fingers. Each finger is 10 μm in width and 1 mm in length, finger–finger spacing is 8 μm, with a finger-to-finger overlap of 800 μm. Fig. 5A is a high resolution transmission electron microscope (HRTEM, TITAN 80-300) image of a 200 °C heat-treated thin film showing crystalline nanocrystals with the selected area electron diffraction (SAED) pattern (Fig. 5A, inset) displaying clear diffraction rings assignable to (110), (101), and (211) crystallographic planes of tetragonal SnO2 in accordance with the synthetic cassiterite. The high-magnification image of the selected area in insert image of Fig. 5A presents the walls of the porous inorganic framework consisting of crystallized tin dioxide grains, where the nanopores are packed in an arrangement with an average pore size of approximately 2–3 nm. Fig. 5B shows a TEM image of a 400 °C annealed nanoporous film; the nanopore arrays are packed in an ordered arrangement with a repeating distance. The difference between the pore sizes of both films is quite clearly observed from the high-magnification insert images of Fig. 5A and B. For the 400 °C annealed nanoporous film, the nanopore arrays are packed in an ordered arrangement with an average pore size of approximately 7–8 nm. To gain more insight about the distribution of platinum, STEM observation was carried out. STEM images, in high-angle annular dark-field mode, travelling over film cross-sections-see Fig. 5C and D – reveal the dispersion of the platinum within the ordered nanoporous films. Further EDX line measurements taken from the selected area (marked by a black line in Fig. 5C and D) exhibit the presence of platinum and tin, indicating that the 200 °C heat-treated sensing film with high content of Pt and small pore size forms much more PtOx/SnO2 heterojunctions than that of the 400 °C heat-treated sensing film with low content of Pt and bigger pore size. Therefore, for 200 °C calcined thin films, the PtOx/SnO2 heterojunctions would play more importance role in sensing films' gas-sensing properties at room temperature. However, it is impossible to discriminate platinum with tin dioxide for both two films, indicating the nice dispersion of platinum all over the two films.
To get deeper insights in the chemical composition of thin films surface, Pt-doped SnO2 thin films heat-treated at different temperature ranging from 200 to 400 °C were studied by XPS and the representative high-resolution XPS spectra comprising Sn 3d, Pt 4f, and O 1s core levels of Pt-doped SnO2 sensing film after different heat treatment, show in Fig. 6. The Sn 3d core level spectra of the 200 °C heated Pt-doped thin films shown in Fig. 6A consists of a doublet located a binding energies of 486.9 and 495.4 eV, which can be assigned to the Sn 3d5/2 and Sn 3d3/2 of Sn4+ in SnO2, respectively. The splitting of the 3d doublet is 8.5 eV, demonstrating that the Sn in the thin films is in a single form of Sn4+. Analysis of the Sn 3d core level spectrum of the 400 °C heated Pt-doped thin films displays a binding energy shift of +0.2 eV compared to the 200 °C heated thin films.
Fig. 6 (A) Sn 3d, (B) Pt 4f and (C) O 1s spectra of the 200 °C, 300 °C and 400 °C annealed ordered nanoporous Pt-SnO2 film. |
In Fig. 6B, the Pt 4f core level line of the 200 °C heated Pt-doped thin films could be fitted with two main doublets with Eb of Pt 4f7/2 at 72.5 eV and 73.5 eV. The platinum state with the lower Eb can be assigned to Pt2+ in platinum oxide (PtO) but with shift to a lower energy by 0.6 eV in relation to the Eb of bulk PtO, which was expected to smaller oxidized platinum nanoparticles than in case of the bulk oxide. The Pt 4f7/2 peak with the higher Eb can be assigned to the strong oxidized platinum (4+) state. PtO2 is unstable in its anhydrous form but has been shown to be stabilized by the matrix of other oxides, such as SnO2 and PtO. Therefore, it is reasonable to propose that the Pt4+ state in our work is stabilized in its anhydrous form by the SnO2 oxide. On the other hand, the Pt 4f peak shows a positive shift of ∼0.3 eV from the 200 °C heat-treated thin films to 400 °C treated thin films. The energy shift with increasing calcination temperature is a result of the growth of PtOx nanoparticles, which introduces more Pt atoms progressively away from the interface with the SnO2 particles and thus results in a weaker electronic interaction between the Pt atoms and the SnO2 thin film. Furthermore, the peak intensity of Pt Eb dramatically decreases with the temperature increase from 200 °C to 400 °C, which is in good agreement with the SEM studies. The significant changes of nanoporous ordering, surface composition, and electronic interaction can greatly influence the sensing behaviour of the SnO2 thin film. Because PtO exhibits the p-type semiconductor property with a band gap of 0.86 eV, as opposed to the n-type SnO2 (3.6 eV), Oxidized PtOx can create p–n junctions on the large surface area of ordered SnO2 thin films. For 200 °C calcined thin films, the PtOx/SnO2 heterojunctions play an importance role here. The adsorption of oxygen on the surface may full deplete the electrons in the PtOx layer as the thickness of PtOx is smaller than the Debye length (ca. 3 nm). A depletion zone where PtOx has penetrated into the SnO2 films is formed. In addition, Pt cations work as acceptor dopants in n-type SnO2. Consequently, together with the synergetic depletion effect, the dominant carriers in the PtOx/SnO2 interface layer change from electrons to holes. As one can expect, the conduction type of the thin films will be p-type. For 400 °C calcined thin films possess highly ordered nanopores with high size, the low content of oxidized Pt nanoparticles, the sensor undergoes a transition from p- to n-type with increasing calcination temperature, which can be explained by the surface-depletion model. When the ordered nanoporous sensing film is exposed to dry air, oxygen ions are adsorbed onto the inner and outer surface of the sensing films. Therefore, the depletion layer may extend throughout the whole area of the sensing films nanostructure. Therefore, the resistance increases and the sensor response inverts to n-type.
The high-resolution XPS spectrum of O 1s for the 200 °C heated Pt-doped thin films is shown in Fig. 6C, one finds that the O 1s consists of two components in different chemical states: Olatt (530.78 eV) and Ox− (531.88 eV). Olatt is attributed to the oxygen ions in the crystal lattice which are thought to be pretty stable and have no contribution to the gas response, meanwhile, Ox− is attributed to the adsorbed oxygen ions, which have a very important role in the gas sensing property and will be further discussed in the sensing mechanism section, in the oxygen deficient regions such as oxygen vacancy (VO), oxygen interstitial (Oi) and oxygen antisite (Osn) defects.32 With the increase of calcination temperature up to 400 °C, the intensity of Ox− increases significantly as well as, which supports the surface-depletion model brought up above to some degree.
In this study, the sensor response is defined as ΔR/R, where ΔR stands for the resistance variation (Ra − Rg). This parameter is positive (negative) for n-type (p-type) toluene sensing. Pristine nanoporous SnO2 thin films showed the Rair value of 70 MΩ while the 200 °C heated Pt-doped SnO2 thin films had a more than two-fold higher Rair (150 MΩ) probably due to the extended electron depleted regions arising from oxygen adsorption on the thin film. The ordered Pt-doped nanoporous thin films showed a dramatic increase in Rair compared to the pure SnO2 thin films. This result might be attributed to the formation of depletion layers from p–n junctions between p-type PtO and n-type SnO2. The measurement were performed at room temperature with toluene gas exposure concentration ranging from 10 ppm to 200 ppm, and the test were switched from low concentration to high concentration, and then conversely from high concentration to low concentration. However, an abnormal resistance increase occurs on exposure to toluene vapour. Chemiresistive sensors are classified as n or p type depending on whether their conductance increases or decreases when they are exposed to a reducing gas, and vice versa for oxidizing gases, i.e. decreased conductance is expected for n-type sensing. In this context, the 200 °C and 300 °C heated sensing films exhibit an unusual p-type gas sensing response to toluene, more like that of a p-type metal oxide, as shown in Fig. 7A.14 Each exposure/recovery cycle were carried out for an exposure interval of 50 s followed by a recovery interval of 50 s in dry air. The sensor response clearly tracks the change in the toluene concentration. Moreover, the responses are extremely fast, and the sensor can fully recover in very short times after toluene removal. Specifically, the response times, defined as the time necessary to reach 90% of the maximum response, range between 30 and 35 s and decrease as the toluene concentration is increased. The recovery times are in the range of 15–20 s and decreased as the toluene concentration decreased. However, it can be seen that the 200 °C heated 12 at% Pt-SnO2 sample is more sensitive than the 300 °C heated 6 at% Pt-SnO2 sample. Taking 200 ppm as an example, the 200 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample exhibits a sensitivity of 10.5, which is higher than that (5.4) of the 300 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample, as shown in Fig. 7B. One probable reason is that toluene reacted mainly at the PtOx/SnO2 interface layer. With the higher calcination temperature, the interface layer has been partly collapsed during the increase of the number and size of nanopores, which is in good agreement with the FESEM results. Therefore, the catalytic activity of PtOx becomes weaker and the change of the resistance in the 300 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample will be lower than that of the 200 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample. The above results are in good agreement with the report that the general nature of this phenomenon related to the behaviour of semiconductor surfaces itself, the formation of p-type conductivity on n-type semiconductor can be caused by a formation of an inversion layer at the surface and therefore to the inversion of the type of mobile carrier at the surface.33 As calcination temperatures increased to 400 °C, Pt-doped SnO2 thin films possess highly ordered nanopores with high size, the lowest content (3 at%)of oxidized Pt nanoparticles. When the ordered nanoporous sensing film is exposed to dry air, oxygen ions are adsorbed onto the inner and outer surface of the sensing films. Therefore, the depletion layer may extend throughout the whole area of the sensing films nanostructure. Upon exposure to toluene, the ordered nanoporous sensing film quickly responds with a decrease in resistance, which reveals the typical n-type semiconducting behaviour of sensing films. A clear increase in the sensitivity is observed with the increasing gas concentration, and of all the materials tested, ordered nanoporous Pt-SnO2 sensing film after 400 °C calcination exhibits the best toluene-sensing performance at room temperature, with high response to toluene concentrations between 10 and 200 ppm. For 200 ppm toluene vapour, the 400 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample exhibits a sensitivity of 15.9, which is higher than that (10.5) of the 200 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample. Specifically, the response time, defined as the time necessary to reach 90% of the maximum response, range between 25 and 30 s and decrease as the toluene concentration is increased. The recovery time is in the range of 13–17 s and decreased as the toluene concentration decreased, as shown in Fig. 7B. With further increase of calcination temperature, the 500 °C heated sensing film's toluene response reduces substantially compared with the optimal one, as shown in Fig. 7C. The unfavourable characteristic may be caused by the decrease of surface areas from 109.2 to 92.4 m2 g−1 (as shown in ESI, Fig. S3†) and the nanoparticle size increase from 3.8 to 5.2 nm. It should also be pointed out that ordered nanoporous 3 at% Pt-SnO2 sample also possesses superior performance when compared with other SnO2-based samples reported in previous works,4,34 which means that post-synthetic hydrothermal treatment is an effective method to synthesize high sensitivity ordered nanoporous SnO2 gas sensor. A similar sensitivity could not be observed in the case of a similar nanoporous tin dioxide thin film prepared under similar conditions but without platinum.
Selectivity is another very important parameter for the ordered nanoporous SnO2 gas sensor, because poor selectivity will induce mistaken alarm and limit its extensive utilization. Several vapour organic compounds were tested to explore the potential application of Pt-doped nanoporous SnO2 as an excellent sensor in terms of high sensitivity and fast response for chemical vapour detection at room temperature. The responses of the 200 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample with 12 at% Pt and the 400 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample with 3 at% Pt to five target gases with 200 ppm concentration at room temperature were further investigated, and the relevant results are shown in Fig. 7D. For both above two samples, the responses to toluene are much higher than that to aether, ethanol, isopropanol, and acetone, indicating the significant enhancement of the toluene selectivity with the platinum dopant. That is to say, the present sensors display quite outstanding selectivity to toluene, especially the 3 at% Pt-doped SnO2, of which the responses reach 6.3, 1.2, 1.5, and 3.9 to aether, ethanol, isopropanol, and acetone, respectively. Thus, 3 at% Pt-doped SnO2 sensing film exhibits not only high response but also high toluene selectivity against acetone and other gases at a low gas concentration of 200 ppm. It is important to note that high response to toluene of 3 at% Pt-doped SnO2 sensing films based sensors is possibly due to more effective dissociation between Pt nanoparticles and the C7H8 gas than the other tested gases. C7H8, among the gases tested, is unique since it has an additional methyl group (–CH3). This group plays a crucial role in enhancing the selectivity of sensors. The adsorption of C7H8 onto the Pt surface is significantly affected by electronic effects, which lower the barrier for adsorption of C7H8 by making the donation of electrons from the πCH3 level to the Fermi level easier and by the making back-donation from the Fermi level to the πCH3* level more facile.35 However, at higher Pt doping levels (12 at% Pt in 200 °C heated Pt-SnO2 sample), the toluene response switch from n- to p-type. This characteristic may be caused by the high-level surface disorder on sensing films surfaces induced by the heavy Pt doping. The surface disorder can be represented as defective surface states that trap charge carries, causing pinning of Fermi-level. Therefore, the transition from n- to p-type conductivity on n-type semiconductor can be caused by a formation of an p-Pt–O–Sn layer at the surface and therefore to the inversion of the type of mobile carrier at the surface, which is in good agreement with the STEM results.33
Doping SnO2 with lower valency cations, such as Pt2+, increases the Debye length by means of a decrease in the carrier concentration, which increases the films resistivity. Since Pt2+ acts as an acceptor type impurity, this could be expressed as:
SnO2 → Sn–O–Pt + O0 |
O0 → V0 + 2Oi |
VO → V0− + h+ |
Based on the mechanism concerning surface band bending,37 adsorption effects are expected to be quite significant in Pt-doped SnO2 thin film-based sensor. PtO is a p-type semiconductor and it can form Schottky contacts with SnO2 nanoparticles inducing a depletion layer in the SnO2 thin film. According to the oxygen ionosorption model, oxygen is molecularly adsorbed on the PtO layer in the form of superoxide anions (O2−). The negative charges on the surface of SnO2 would form surface band bending. Upon being exposed to toluene vapour, O2− forms will change into O− or even O2− forms via the Pt-catalyzed reactions. That is to say, when the 200 °C heat-treated sensing film with high content of PtO and small pore size exposes to toluene vapour, toluene incorporation into PtO and SnO2 semiconductors can form shallow donors. The contributed electrons by toluene incorporation are migrated to the sensing films and are restricted by the p-Pt–O–Sn layer. The band bends upward more dominantly, which results in the p-type behaviour at room temperature. Therefore, we are convinced that the p–n transit of the sensing response to toluene is closely associated with the Pt dopant, and the PtOx/SnO2 heterojunctions remain important to sensing properties of sensing films. Because of the close comparability in the work function of SnO2 and PtOx, charge transfer can readily proceed between them across the low interface barrier. The adsorption of oxygen on the surface may fully deplete the electrons in the PtOx layer of the 200 °C heat-treated sensing film as the thickness of PtOx is smaller than the Debye length (ca. 3 nm). A depletion zone where PtOx has dispersed into the SnO2 thin films is arranged. In addition, Pt cations reveal an evident tendency for the incorporation into Sn sites and work as acceptor dopants in n-type SnO2. Thus, the hole concentration at the surface enhances by way of the diffusion and substitution of Sn4+ ions by Pt cations. Accordingly, together with the synergetic depletion effect, the dominant carriers in the Pt–O–Sn interface layer change from electrons to holes, thus p-Pt–O–Sn heterojunctions are formed. The sensors calcined at the temperature range of 100–300 °C shows the p-type response to toluene at room temperature. With increasing calcination temperature, the dominant hole carrier concentration in the depleting layer and p-Pt–O–Sn layer decrease. By further increasing the calcination temperature to 400 °C, the decreasing concentration of Pt on the p-Pt–O–Sn layer would reduce the band gap, which could decrease the junction barrier between the p–n interfaces. As one can expect, the conduction type will transit from p-type to n-type when the resultant electron concentration is in excess of the hole concentration with continuous increase of calcination temperature.21 When the ordered nanoporous sensing film after 400 °C calcination is exposed to dry air, oxygen ions are adsorbed onto the inner and outer surface of the sensing films. Therefore, the depletion layer may extend throughout the whole area of the sensing films nanostructure. On the other hands, upon exposure to reducing gas such as toluene, gas molecules will react with more concentration of chemisorbed oxygen ions at inner and outer surface of sensing films, as shown in Scheme 1. This increases the electrons concentration in the sensing film pore walls and narrows the surface depletion layer width, which leads to decrease in the resistance of ordered nanoporous sensing films. Hong and co-workers reported that the switching of sensing behaviour from p-type to n-type depended on deposition amount for SnO2–SWNT38 and ZnO–SWNT39 hybrid sensors. When deposition amount of SnO2 or ZnO on the surface of SWNT increasing, the sensing behaviour of hybrid sensors can be changed from p-type to n-type. Because the deposition amount of SnO2 or ZnO increases in the hybrid sensors, the dominant charge carriers changes from holes to electrons in the sensors. For our work, when the sensing film with high content of platinum and small pore size exposes to toluene vapour, the contributed electrons by toluene incorporation are migrated to the sensing films and are restricted by the p-Pt–O–Sn layer. The band bends upward more dominantly, which results in the p-type behaviour at room temperature. The decreasing concentration of Pt on the p-Pt–O–Sn layer would reduce the band gap, which could decrease the junction barrier between the p–n interfaces. Therefore, when the sensing film with low content of platinum and larger pore size exposes to toluene vapour, the sensing behaviour will transit from p-type to n-type.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c5ra24736e |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016 |