Issue 25, 2012

Low-temperature hydrothermal synthesis of WO3 nanorods and their sensing properties for NO2

Abstract

Tungsten trioxide (WO3) nanorods with an aspect ratio of ∼50 have been successfully synthesized by hydrothermal reaction at a low temperature of 100 °C. The crystal structure, morphology evolution and thermal stability of the products are characterized in detail by XRD, FESEM, FTIR, and TG/DTA techniques. The diameter evolution and distribution of WO3 nanorods strongly depend on hydrothermal temperature and time. Hydrothermal conditions of 100 °C and 24 h ensure the formation of well-defined WO3 nanorods. The transition of the crystal structure from monoclinic WO3 to hexagonal WO3 occurs after calcination at 400 °C. The appropriate calcination conditions of the WO3 nanorods are defined to be 600 °C and 4 h for gas-sensing applications. Response measurements reveal that the WO3 sensor operating at 200 °C exhibits high sensitivity to ppm-level NO2 and small cross-sensing to CO and CH4, which makes this kind of sensor a competitive candidate for NO2-sensing applications. Moreover, impedance measurements indicate that a conductivity mechanism of the sensor is mainly dependent on the grain boundaries of WO3 nanorods. A possible adsorption and reaction model is proposed to illustrate the gas-sensing mechanism.

Graphical abstract: Low-temperature hydrothermal synthesis of WO3 nanorods and their sensing properties for NO2

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Feb 2012
Accepted
20 Apr 2012
First published
24 Apr 2012

J. Mater. Chem., 2012,22, 12643-12650

Low-temperature hydrothermal synthesis of WO3 nanorods and their sensing properties for NO2

S. Bai, K. Zhang, R. Luo, D. Li, A. Chen and C. C. Liu, J. Mater. Chem., 2012, 22, 12643 DOI: 10.1039/C2JM30997A

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