Indium-doping-induced selenium vacancy engineering of layered tin diselenide for improving room-temperature sulfur dioxide gas sensing†
Abstract
Layered metal dichalcogenides (LMDs) are promising gas-sensing materials due to their high specific surface area and satisfactory electrical conductivity. However, virgin LMD-based gas sensors have several performance constraints, including low sensor sensitivity and poor detection limits, which need to be addressed urgently. Cation-doping-induced vacancy engineering is an appealing route to improve the gas-sensing performance of LMDs by modulating their electronic structures and chemical properties. In this work, indium-doped tin diselenide (In–SnSe2) nanosheets were synthesized via a one-step hydrothermal strategy, resulting in a sulfur dioxide (SO2) sensor with improved sensitivity (4.85 ppm−1) and a low detection limit (3.46 ppb). Compared with the pristine SnSe2 sensor, the In-doped SnSe2 sensor with a vintage doping ratio has enhanced the SO2 response (72.45% vs. 38.66% to 5 ppm) at room temperature (25 °C). In addition, the In-doped SnSe2 sensor shows rapid reaction time, outstanding SO2 selectivity, as well as exceptional stability. According to experimental investigation and density functional theory (DFT) calculations, doped-In and induced-Se vacancies have opposite roles in SO2 sensing, which yields the optimum doping ratio with the highest gas response. This study sheds light on the sensitization mechanism and promotes the development of high-performance gas sensors based on doped 2D LMDs.