Ammonia gas detection by solution combustion-processed pristine & Ti-doped ZnO transparent films: a reverse effect of doping on gas response
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Date
2023
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Springer
Abstract
In this contribution, pure, polycrystalline wurtzite crystal structured, spin-coated pristine ZnO and Ti-doped (1, 2, and 3 wt%) ZnO transparent films were accomplished at 400 °C through a facile solution combustion synthesis method. Crystallinity, roughness, and porosity in the pristine film were relatively higher than in the doped films. The demonstrated films were transparent, with ~ 70 to 90% in the visible region. The room temperature detection of ammonia (NH<inf>3</inf>) gas (25–100 ppm) was recognized in all the films. The pristine film revealed a superior gas response at every concentration of NH<inf>3</inf> gas in contrast to all the doped films; it is probably due to comparatively high crystallinity, porosity, more oxygen vacancy concentration (1.788), and high fraction of adsorbed oxygen (20.55%). The film exhibited the highest gas response of 34.7 at 100 ppm of NH<inf>3</inf> gas and a limit of detection of ~ 10.7 ppm with superior selectivity towards NH<inf>3</inf> gas. Although doping enhanced the transparency but diminished the NH<inf>3</inf> gas response due to the combined effect of deterioration in the mentioned properties achieved in pristine film. © 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
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Keywords
Ammonia, Combustion synthesis, Crystallinity, Deterioration, II-VI semiconductors, Oxygen, Oxygen vacancies, Porosity, Semiconductor doping, Titanium compounds, Zinc oxide, Zinc sulfide, Ammonia gas, Doped films, Doped ZnO, Gas detection, Gas response, Pristine films, Reverse effects, Solution combustion, Ti doped, Transparent films, Gases
Citation
Journal of Materials Science: Materials in Electronics, 2023, 34, 11, pp. -
