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Single-Crystal Pt-Decorated WO3 Ultrathin Films: A Platform for Sub-ppm Hydrogen Sensing at Room Temperature
Author(s) -
Giordano Mattoni,
Bas de Jong,
Nicola Manca,
M. Tomellini,
Andrea D. Caviglia
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
acs applied nano materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.227
H-Index - 29
ISSN - 2574-0970
DOI - 10.1021/acsanm.8b00627
Subject(s) - materials science , hydrogen , intercalation (chemistry) , fabrication , nanotechnology , doping , single crystal , crystal (programming language) , operating temperature , kinetic energy , chemical engineering , chemical physics , optoelectronics , inorganic chemistry , crystallography , chemistry , thermodynamics , computer science , medicine , alternative medicine , physics , organic chemistry , pathology , quantum mechanics , programming language , engineering
Hydrogen-related technologies are rapidly developing, driven by the necessity of efficient and high-density energy storage. This poses new challenges to the detection of dangerous gases, in particular the realization of cheap, sensitive, and fast hydrogen sensors. Several materials are being studied for this application, but most present critical bottlenecks, such as high operational temperature, low sensitivity, slow response time, and/or complex fabrication procedures. Here, we demonstrate that WO 3 in the form of single-crystal, ultrathin films with a Pt catalyst allows high-performance sensing of H 2 gas at room temperature. Thanks to the high electrical resistance in the pristine state, this material is able to detect hydrogen concentrations down to 1 ppm near room temperature. Moreover, the high surface-to-volume ratio of WO 3 ultrathin films determines fast sensor response and recovery, with characteristic times as low as 1 s when the concentration exceeds 100 ppm. By modeling the hydrogen (de)intercalation dynamics with a kinetic model, we extract the energy barriers of the relevant processes and relate the doping mechanism to the formation of oxygen vacancies. Our results reveal the potential of single-crystal WO 3 ultrathin films toward the development of sub-ppm hydrogen detectors working at room temperature.

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