Issue 4, 2011

Polyethylene glycol-directed SnO2nanowires for enhanced gas-sensing properties

Abstract

SnO2 nanowires with lengths in the tens of micrometres range have been synthesized on a large scale via a facile polyethylene glycol-directed method at ambient temperature followed by a suitable thermal treatment of the precursor nanowires. The morphology of the precursor of the SnO2 nanowires is tunable by changing the concentration of either SnCl2 or polyethylene glycol. After calcination, the resulting SnO2 nanowires retain a similar shape to the precursor, but with hierarchical architecture, which can be considered as one-dimensional nanowires assembled by interconnected SnO2 nanoparticles with a high surface-to-volume ratio. The SnO2 nanowires are investigated with XRD, SEM, TEM, and gas sensing tests for detecting CO and H2. It is found that the present SnO2 nanowires exhibit a remarkable sensitivity and low detection limit (10 ppm for H2), as well as good reproducibility and short response/recovery times, which benefit from the unique hierarchical structure with a high surface-to-volume ratio and the 3D network formed by the nanowires.

Graphical abstract: Polyethylene glycol-directed SnO2 nanowires for enhanced gas-sensing properties

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
09 Nov 2010
Accepted
30 Jan 2011
First published
26 Feb 2011

Nanoscale, 2011,3, 1802-1806

Polyethylene glycol-directed SnO2 nanowires for enhanced gas-sensing properties

Y. Yin, L. Jiang, L. Wan, C. Li and Y. Guo, Nanoscale, 2011, 3, 1802 DOI: 10.1039/C0NR00843E

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