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Item Room-temperature detection of ammonia and formaldehyde gases by La xBa1?xSnO3?? (x = 0 and 0.05) screen printed sensors: effect of ceria and ruthenate sensitization(Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH, 2021) Manjunath, G.; Vardhan, R.V.; Praveen, L.L.; Pothukanuri, P.; Mandal, S.In the present work, gas sensing properties of the screen printed ceria and ruthenate-sensitized BaSnO3 (BSO) with La doping heterostructure sensors towards the detection of ammonia and formaldehyde gases at room temperature were studied. Adhered, porous screen printed films with different morphologies were obtained by depositing the LaxBa1?xSnO3?? (x = 0 and 0.05) powder particles prepared by the polymerized complex method. Ceria and ruthenate sensitization for screen printed LaxBa1?xSnO3?? (x = 0.05) film was processed through dip-coating in the 0.03 M aqueous solution of CeCl3 and RuCl3, respectively. La-doped BaSnO3 (LBSO) sensor with smaller crystallites, needle-like morphology and high concentration of oxygen vacancies exhibited superior gas response of 65 and 29 towards 50 ppm of ammonia and formaldehyde gases, respectively. Superabundant sensitization of ceria and ruthenate reduced the oxygen vacancy and structural open porosity in the LBSO sensor; therefore, the ammonia gas response was decreased from 65 to 14 and 3, respectively, whereas the formaldehyde gas response was reduced to less than 1/6th times the LBSO sensor. Limit of detection of LBSO sensors was estimated to be ~ 1 and ~ 2 ppm against ammonia and formaldehyde, respectively. The presence of fluorite structured phase ceria with high oxygen atoms storage capacity facilitates the rapid oxidization of analyte gases and caused the expeditious response (75 s) and recovery (60 s) in CeOx-sensitized LBSO sensor. This study might give a new insight into the development of doped and sensitized BSO-based gas sensors operating at ambient conditions. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH, DE part of Springer Nature.Item Ultra-sensitive clogging free combustible molecular precursor-based screen-printed ZnO sensors: a detection of ammonia and formaldehyde breath markers(Springer, 2021) Manjunath, G.; Pothukanuri, P.; Mandal, S.It is beneficial to develop the cost-effective, ultra-sensitive ZnO-based sensor for the rapid detection and quantification of the ammonia and formaldehyde breath markers under ambient conditions. Here, one-step solution route was adopted to formulate the aqueous combustible molecular precursor-based clogging free screen-printing ink consisting of zinc nitrate as an oxidizer, glycine as fuel, and eco-friendly binder sodium carboxymethylcellulose. The formulated precursor was deposited on the glass substrates via a screen-printing technique followed by annealing at different temperatures for an hour. Screen printed ZnO sensors processed at 500 °C with high crystallinity, less lattice distortion, low optical bandgap, and high concentration of donor defects showed remarkably high NH3 gas response ~ 336 and a moderate HCHO response ~ 16.4 towards the 5 ppm and 10 ppm of the respective gases. In addition it's LOD values is drawn as 0.6 ppm and 2.9 ppm for NH3 and HCHO gases, respectively, and exhibits superior selectivity towards ammonia. Faster diffusion of oxygen vacancies (Vo) in the smaller crystallites resulted expeditious sensor kinetics in the screen-printed sensor processed at 400 °C. Response and recovery time were recorded to be 50 s and 50 s to the 5 ppm of NH3, respectively. The crystallinity-dominant domain overcomes the adverse effect of larger grains on the gas response of screen-printed ZnO sensor processed at 500 °C. Robust, scalable, and cost-effective screen-printed ZnO conductometric sensors demonstrated here has a potential application in clinical diagnosis, and also in monitoring the NH3 and HCHO gases at low ppm-level. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC part of Springer Nature.
