Neha
Sharma
ab and
Sandip Paul
Choudhury
*a
aDepartment of Physics, Amity School of Applied Science, Amity University Rajasthan, Jaipur, Rajasthan – 303002, India. E-mail: sandip.pchoudhury@gmail.com
bDepartment of Physics, JECRC Foundation, Jaipur, Rajasthan – 302022, India
First published on 4th November 2025
The impact of Erbium (Er) doping on the gas sensing performance of the In2O3(001) surface toward H2S, NO2, and CO was rigorously investigated using density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Analysis based on adsorption energy, Bader charge transfer, and density of states (DOS) confirms that Er doping selectively enhances the surface reactivity toward NO2. Key results demonstrate a marked improvement in NO2 binding strength: the adsorption energy increases significantly from −0.37 eV on the pristine surface to −0.61 eV on the Er-doped surface. This stronger chemisorption is supported by enhanced electron withdrawal from the surface by NO2, with the charge transfer increasing from −0.38 e (pristine) to −0.46 e (Er-doped). Furthermore, TDOS and PDOS analyses confirm the appearance of new, strong electronic states near the Fermi level only after NO2 adsorption on the doped surface, indicating robust electron coupling. Conversely, Er doping weakens the interaction with the other test gases. For H2S, the adsorption energy reduces from −0.53 eV to −0.42 eV, and charge transfer drops sharply from +0.40 e to +0.09 e. CO adsorption remains weak, with the energy decreasing slightly from −0.25 eV to −0.19 eV. These findings indicate that Er-doped In2O3(001) surfaces exhibit enhanced selectivity, making them highly promising candidates for selective NO2 detection.
Metal oxide semiconductors (MOSs) such as ZnO, WO3, SnO2 and In2O3 are used as a gas sensing material in many gas sensors because of their easy fabrication process, low cost and good performance.4 Among these, indium oxide (In2O3) is a promising sensing material due to its high conductivity, adjustable shape and size, good catalytic properties and abundant defects. In2O3 is an n-type metal oxide semiconductor (MOS) with a wide band gap of 3.75 eV (direct) and 2.61 eV (indirect).5 Studies on various morphologies, such as nanoparticles, nanofibers, nanosheets and nanoflowers, have been conducted for environmental pollutant gases (NO2, CO and H2S) to increase sensitivity and selectivity.6 Some progress has been made for pristine In2O3-based gas sensors to overcome the selectivity and operating temperature issue.7 Doping is an efficient way to overcome these issues because a small amount of dopant may convert the non-porous structure to a porous structure and provide defect states, which is good for gas sensing.8,9
Nowadays, rare earth elements (REEs) are emerging to solve these problems because they have 4f orbitals with partially filled electrons. When a rare earth element (RE3+) is added to indium oxide (In2O3), it can easily take the place of In+3 because of the similarity in their ionic radii. This replacement causes some strain in the crystal structure of In2O3.10 Among them, europium (Eu) and erbium (Er) are particularly interesting for In2O3 due to their stable trivalent oxidation state (Eu3+/Er3+), which allows substitution at indium sites with minimal lattice distortion. Eu-doping has been shown to enhance charge transfer and adsorption capability, improving the surface reactivity of In2O3 toward gas molecules. On the other hand, Er possesses a slightly smaller ionic radius and a distinct 4f electronic configuration, which can further modify the band structure and facilitate stronger interactions with adsorbed species. A study by Zhou et al.11 reported that hydrothermally synthesized 3 wt% Ce-doped In2O3 as compared to the pristine In2O3 has a better response for n-butanol gas. They observed that 3 wt% Ce-doped In2O3 has a response value of 225.3 for 100 ppm n-butanol gas at an optimum temperature of 320 °C, which was 3.7 times higher than that of pure In2O3. Wang et al.12 synthesized In2O3 and Er-doped In2O3 nanotubes by an electrospinning method followed by calcination. They observed that the synthesized Er-doped In2O3 has 4 times the response value than that of pure In2O3 for 20 ppm formaldehyde (HCHO) gas at 260 °C temperature. Qin et al. reported that the carbon thermal reduction method was utilized for the synthesis of pure and Er-doped In2O3 nanoribbons.13 The Er doping in In2O3 reduces the optimal temperature from 260 °C to 220 °C and also increases the sensitivity of 100 ppm ethanol from 2.4 to 4.8. It shows better selectivity towards interfering gases such as CO, H2S, HCHO and NO2. They observed that Er doping reduced the operating temperature for alcohol detection, and a fast response and recovery time were achieved for different alcohol concentrations at 220 °C. Liu et al. performed a DFT study to evaluate the adsorption effect of gases such as H2, CO and CH4 on the In2O3(110) surface. The calculation results based on DFT indicate that intrinsic In2O3 is not optimum for H2, CO and CH4 adsorption, while Ag-decorated In2O3 shows optimum sensing for these gases.3 Chen et al.14 reported that the Eu-doped In2O3 nanobelts exhibit higher sensitivity towards H2S gas as compared to pure In2O3. They showed that Eu doping enhances the sensitivity of H2S gas by five times compared to undoped In2O3. Eu-doped In2O3 exhibits better selectivity towards to H2S gas with interfering gases such as CO, NO2, HCHO and ethanol at 260 °C temperature.
The novelty of the present study lies in providing a comparative mechanistic understanding of gas adsorption on rare earth element (REE)-doped In2O3 surfaces. The present study explores Er and Eu-doped In2O3 systems for gas-sensing applications at the DFT level, which have not been previously explored. Earlier DFT studies on In2O3 mainly focused on pristine and transition metal-doped surfaces and their analysis was limited to single gas adsorption. In contrast, our DFT investigation systematically examines the adsorption behaviour of multiple gases (H2S, NO2, and CO), analysing adsorption energies, charge density differences (CDD), and density of states (DOS). All calculations were performed using Quantum Espresso on a hexagonal In2O3 unit cell (space group R
c). Compared with previous theoretical investigations on In2O3 surfaces, the present DFT study provides several distinctive contributions. First, the (001) surface of In2O3 was chosen, which is less explored but exhibits high surface reactivity relevant for gas sensing applications. Second, the study systematically examines the influence on the electronic structure and gas adsorption properties of rare-earth element Er. Third, a comparative analysis of H2S, NO2, and CO adsorption is performed to elucidate NO2 selectivity based on adsorption energy, charge density difference, and DOS evolution. This approach provides atomistic insight into how the Er dopant modulates surface reactivity and charge transfer characteristics, thereby guiding towards a more reliable rare-earth-element-doped In2O3 gas sensor.
The adsorption energy was calculated by the quantitative analysis of gas molecule interaction with the In2O3(001) surface by the following equation17,18
ΔEadsorption = Esurface+gas molecule − Esurface − Egas molecule | (1) |
molecule, Esurface and Egas
molecule represent the adsorption energy, total energy of the surface with a gas molecule, total energy of the surface, and total energy of the gas molecule, respectively. The adsorption energy of defect/doped surfaces was calculated by eqn (2)ΔEadsorption = Edefect surface+gas molecule − Edefect surface − Egas molecule | (2) |
surface+gas
molecule, Edefect
surface and Egas
molecule represent the adsorption energy, total energy of the defect/doped surface with a gas molecule, total energy of the defect surface, and total energy of the gas molecule, respectively.
The adsorption energies of H2S, NO2 and CO were calculated on both pristine and Er-doped In2O3 surfaces using eqn (1) and (2). The adsorption energies were calculated for different Er-doped sites in In2O3. Among them, the configuration in which the first Er atom replaced the first indium (In) atom on the In2O3(001) upper surface was found to be the most favourable. The adsorption energy for NO2, Er-doping significantly enhanced the adsorption strength (from −0.379 eV to −0.61 eV) (as shown in Table 1), indicating improved sensing potential. However, for H2S and CO, the adsorption strength slightly decreased upon Er incorporation. The decrease in H2S adsorption energy (−0.53 eV to −0.42 eV) remains within an acceptable sensing range, suggesting moderate sensing capability. CO adsorption energies remained weak in both cases (−0.25 eV to −0.19 eV), indicating poor interaction with surfaces. These findings suggest that Er-doping on the In2O3 surface increases the adsorption of the NO2 molecule while diminishing the adsorption of H2S and CO molecules. This suggests that erbium (Er) doping selectively enhances the sensitivity of In2O3 toward NO2.
| S. no. | Gases | Adsorption energy (eV) | Charge transfer values | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pure In2O3(001) surface | Er-doped In2O3(001) surface | Pure In2O3(001) surface | Er-doped In2O3(001) surface | ||
| 1. | NO2 | −0.37 | −0.61 | −0.3855e | −0.4596e |
| 2. | H2S | −0.53 | −0.42 | +0.4053e | +0.0927e |
| 3. | CO | −0.25 | −0.19 | +0.0312e | +0.0711e |
Also, Bader charge analysis was performed to evaluate the charge transfer between gas molecules and the surfaces (In2O3 and Er-doped In2O3). The charge transfer results indicate distinct gas adsorption behaviours for the pure and Er-doped In2O3 systems. The net charge transfer values for gas molecules on In2O3 and Er-doped In2O3 surfaces were examined through the following equation:
| ΔQ = Qa − Qb | (3) |
For H2S, the pure In2O3 surface shows a significantly higher charge transfer (+0.4053 e) than the Er-doped surface (+0.0927 e), suggesting stronger adsorption on the undoped material. Conversely, for NO2, the Er-doped In2O3 surface exhibits a more negative charge transfer (−0.4596 e) as compared to the pure In2O3 surface (−0.3855 e), implying enhanced electron donation, and thus stronger adsorption upon doping. The CO molecule, however, exhibits very low charge transfer performance for both the surfaces In2O3 and Er-doped In2O3 +0.0312 e, +0.0711 e, respectively. The CO molecule interaction reduces slightly on the Er–In2O3 surface. This indicates that a weak physisorption process occurs for the CO gas molecule. The charge transfer values are consistent with the results of adsorption energy. These findings reveal that Er-doping improves the NO2 sensing selectivity, while a pure In2O3 surface is more favourable for H2S gas detection.
Δρ = ρsurface+gas molecule − ρisolated surface − ρisolated gas molecule | (4) |
molecule, ρisolated
surface and ρisolated
gas
molecule represent the charge density difference, charge density of the gas molecule adsorbed surface, charge density without a gas molecule, and charge density of an isolated gas molecule, respectively.
The CDD plots for the intrinsic In2O3(001) surface and Er-doped In2O3(001) surface upon adsorption of gases H2S, NO2 and CO are shown in Fig. 2. The CDD plot gives a qualitative analysis of Bader charge analysis. For H2S gas, the CDD plot of In2O3 and Er-doped In2O3 shows a delocalized distribution of charges between the surface and gas molecule. In CDD plots, the yellow colour indicates the charge accumulation while cyan colour indicates the charge depletion.23 The Bader charge transfer of +0.4053 e for H2S on the In2O3 surface indicates that the gas molecules donate electrons from the surface. In the corresponding CDD plot, cyan lobes appear around the H2S molecule, confirming charge depletion, while yellow lobes on the surface (at the lower surface around the In and O atoms) indicate charge accumulation (as shown in Fig. 2(a)). This indicates a sign of electron transfer from the gas molecule to the surface. Similar behaviour is observed for the Er-doped In2O3 surface, but charge transfer reduces to 0.09 e, which is reflected by light yellow and cyan colours. For NO2 gas absorption, the CDD plot exhibits both yellow (accumulation) and cyan (depletion) lobes around the NO2 molecule and the Er-doped In2O3 surface, indicating localized charge redistribution.24 However, Bader charge analysis reveals a net negative charge transfer to the gas molecule, confirming that NO2 withdraws electrons from the surface and acts as an electron acceptor.25 For H2S adsorption on pure and Er-doped In2O3 surfaces, the lobes are not localized at one atom, which reflects surface wide interaction and indicates a physisorption process. The charge redistribution indicates electron donation from the CO molecule to the surface, confirming n-type behaviour.
The total density of states and partial density of states for the pure In2O3(001) surface are shown in Fig. 4(a). It indicates that in TDOS the main contribution is due to the oxygen atoms, while a minor contribution is observed from the indium (In) atoms. Valence band states have concentrated DOS peaks while the conduction band region exhibits low intensity of DOS peaks. Also, band gaps are observed in between the highest occupied state and lower unoccupied state indicating its semiconducting behaviour. For Er-doped In2O3, the DOS contribution of Er is mainly from the p and d orbitals (as shown in Fig. 4(b)). The contribution of Er is observed only in the conduction band, indicating the creation of new states or defect surfaces. These defects are useful for gas sensing applications.
After H2S adsorption on the In2O3(001) surface, the DOS peak intensity decreases from the In2O3(001) surface, indicating an interaction between the surface and H2S gas molecule (as shown in Fig. 4(c)). The partial DOS (PDOS) of indium (In) atoms enhances after H2S adsorption, suggesting a strong interaction between the In2O3(001) surface and H2S molecule. Oxygen atoms contribute significantly to the total DOS (TDOS), similar to the In2O3(001) surface. The PDOS contributions from hydrogen (H) and sulphur (S) atoms are also observed in Fig. 4(d). However, after Er doping into the In2O3(001) surface, the PDOS contributions from hydrogen (H) and sulphur (S) atoms decrease, indicating that the interaction between H2S and the surface is weakened due to Er incorporation (as shown in Fig. 4(d)). Additionally, the TDOS and PDOS of oxygen atoms increase, and the Er contribution appears mainly in the conduction band region. This suggests that Er doping reduces the strength of H2S on the In2O3 surface.
Also, in NO2 adsorption, the valence band is dominated by oxygen (O) PDOS with O 2p states. The nitrogen (N) contribution is seen at energies just above 2 eV, which indicates that NO2 introduces molecular orbitals in the conduction band region, without strongly disturbing the valence band (as shown in Fig. 4(e)). Any significant DOS peaks are not observed exactly at the Fermi level, indicating low charge transfer from pure In2O3 to NO2. This suggests physisorption or weak chemisorption of NO2 on the surface. For the Er–In2O3(001) surface after adsorption of NO2 a large DOS peak is observed right at the Fermi level, mainly contributed by Er and N (as shown in Fig. 4(f)).28 The alteration of TDOS and PDOS peaks after adsorption of a NO2 molecule indicates that the electronic structure changes. The overall electronic structure is altered, and the interaction is stronger than that of pure In2O3, indicating strong adsorption of gas molecules.
After adsorption of CO gas molecules on the In2O3 and Er-doped In2O3 surface the changes in TDOS and PDOS are slightly modified. The carbon (C) related sharp peak at ∼2.2 eV represents the CO molecular orbital contribution (as shown in Fig. 4(g)). This state lies well above the Fermi level, suggesting weak electronic interaction and minimal charge transfer between CO and the In2O3 surface. There being no new states near the Fermi level indicates physisorption or weak chemisorption of CO on pure In2O3. The band gap is preserved, with no significant mid-gap state formation. For the Er-doped In2O3 surface the C-related peak at ∼2.2 eV becomes slightly broader and less intense, and new states appear closer to the Fermi level, indicating a stronger interaction than in the undoped system (as shown in Fig. 4(h)). Some Er-related states overlap with the O and C contributions, especially just below and above the Fermi level. This suggests hybridization and possible weak charge transfer. However, the change is not as significant as observed with NO2 adsorption, indicating that Er doping enhances the CO interaction only slightly, likely weak chemisorption.
Bader charge analysis was conducted to evaluate the effect of Er and Eu doping on the In2O3(001) surface. In the doped systems, the Er and Eu atoms exhibit Bader charges of 2.06 e and 2.04 e, respectively (as shown in Table 2), indicating partial electron donation to the surrounding lattice. This electron redistribution alters the local electronic environment, which can influence gas adsorption behaviour. Notably, nearby oxygen atoms (O1, O2) show charges of −1.275 and −1.277e, respectively, which are more negative than the pure system (−1.185 and −1.186e). For Eu-doping, O1 and O2 also become more negative (−1.261 and −1.262e). These results indicate localized electron accumulation around the oxygen atoms, possibly due to the higher electronegativity and ionic character of the dopants compared to indium (In) atoms. The indium (In) atoms remain largely unaffected across all systems, indicating structural stability.
| Atoms | Bader charge | Bader charge | Bader charge | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| In, O, Er_1 and Eu_1 | Pure In2O3(001) surface (In1 to In12) | Pure In2O3(001) surface (In13 to In24) | Er-doped In2O3(001) surface (In1 (replaced (In1 from Er_1) to In12) | Er-doped In2O3(001) surface (In13 to In24) | Eu-doped In2O3(001) surface (In1 (replaced (In1 from Eu_1) to In12) | Eu-doped In2O3(001) surface (In13 to In24) | |
| Er_1 and Eu_1 are the dopants replaced by first indium (In) atom. | |||||||
| In1 | In13 | 1.725 | 1.725 | Er_1(2.06) | 1.710 | Eu_1(2.04) | 1.709 |
| O1 | O17 | −1.185 | −1.185 | −1.191 | −1.275 | −1.192 | −1.261 |
| O2 | O18 | −1.186 | −1.186 | −1.277 | −1.191 | −1.262 | −1.191 |
| O3 | O19 | −1.187 | −1.187 | −1.192 | −1.195 | −1.191 | −1.195 |
| In2 | In14 | 1.855 | 1.854 | 1.861 | 1.861 | 1.862 | 1.860 |
| In3 | In15 | 1.869 | 1.869 | 1.874 | 1.873 | 1.871 | 1.872 |
| O4 | O20 | −1.245 | −1.245 | −1.248 | −1.245 | −1.242 | −1.245 |
| O5 | O21 | −1.246 | −1.246 | −1.245 | −1.250 | −1.244 | −1.250 |
| O6 | O22 | −1.245 | −1.245 | −1.245 | −1.243 | −1.244 | −1.242 |
| In4 | In16 | 1.867 | 1.867 | 1.887 | 1.866 | 1.888 | 1.865 |
| In5 | In17 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.856 |
| O7 | O23 | −1.138 | −1.138 | −1.137 | −1.138 | −1.137 | −1.138 |
| O8 | O24 | −1.139 | −1.139 | −1.138 | −1.139 | −1.138 | −1.139 |
| O9 | O25 | −1.137 | −1.137 | −1.136 | −1.137 | −1.136 | −1.137 |
| In6 | In18 | 1.537 | 1.537 | 1.533 | 1.533 | 1.533 | 1.533 |
| In7 | In19 | 1.725 | 1.725 | 1.707 | 1.708 | 1.705 | 1.708 |
| O10 | O26 | −1.185 | −1.185 | −1.191 | −1.188 | −1.192 | −1.189 |
| O11 | O27 | −1.186 | −1.186 | −1.193 | −1.188 | −1.193 | −1.189 |
| O12 | O28 | −1.188 | −1.187 | −1.277 | −1.918 | −1.264 | −1.192 |
| In8 | In20 | 1.854 | 1.854 | 1.854 | 1.863 | 1.852 | 1.861 |
| In9 | In21 | 1.869 | 1.869 | 1.872 | 1.867 | 1.871 | 1.865 |
| O13 | O29 | −1.245 | −1.245 | −1.248 | −1.244 | −1.248 | −1.244 |
| O14 | O30 | −1.246 | −1.246 | −1.245 | −1.248 | −1.245 | −1.248 |
| O15 | O31 | −1.245 | −1.245 | −1.248 | −1.245 | −1.248 | −1.245 |
| In10 | In22 | 1.867 | 1.867 | 1.866 | 1.866 | 1.866 | 1.865 |
| In11 | In23 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.856 | 1.857 |
| O16 | O32 | −1.138 | −1.138 | −1.138 | −1.138 | −1.138 | −1.139 |
| O17 | O33 | −1.139 | −1.139 | −1.139 | −1.139 | −1.140 | −1.139 |
| O18 | O34 | −1.137 | −1.137 | −1.137 | −1.137 | −1.138 | −1.137 |
| In12 | In24 | 1.537 | 1.537 | 1.533 | 1.534 | 1.533 | 1.533 |
The optimized structure of Eu-doped In2O3 is shown in Fig. 6(a). The TDOS and PDOS of Eu-doped In2O3 are shown in Fig. 6(b). The contribution in the DOS structure near the Fermi level indicates the presence of defect states introduced by Eu doping. The peak around ∼0.85 eV likely corresponds to the hybridization between O 2p states and indium (In) atoms (as shown in Fig. 6(b)). The observed band gap is useful for the enhancement in the electrical conductivity, which is crucial in sensing applications.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 6 (a) Optimized geometry of Eu-doped In2O3 obtained from DFT calculations. (b) Corresponding total and partial density of states (TDOS and PDOS) of the Eu-doped In2O3(001) surface. | ||
(I) Er-doping significantly alters the adsorption energy for gas molecules. For H2S, the adsorption energy is stronger or more favourable for the pristine surface (−0.53 eV) while for the Er-doped surface it is less negative (−0.42 eV), indicating reduced interaction. For the CO molecule, a slight decrease is observed (from −0.25 to −0.19 eV). In contrast, the adsorption energy for the NO2 molecule enhances from −0.37 to −0.61 eV upon Er doping, indicating enhanced interaction and suggesting that the Er-doped In2O3(001) surface is more favourable for selective NO2 gas detection.
(II) Bader charge analysis supports these observations. For H2S gas, charge transfer decreases from +0.40 e (pristine) to +0.09 e (Er-doped surface) and for CO the changes are minor. However, for NO2, charge transfer increases from −0.38 e (pristine) to −0.46 e (Er-doped), confirming stronger interaction upon doping.
(III) Band structure results indicate changes in the electronic structure after Er doping, reflecting the impact of dopant states.
(IV) TDOS and PDOS analyses reveal that after NO2 adsorption on the Er-doped In2O3 surface, new states appear near the Fermi energy, indicating strong electronic interaction.
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