Xiaopeng
Li
a,
Ying
Wang
b,
Yu
Lei
b and
Zhiyong
Gu
*a
aDepartment of Chemical Engineering, University of Massachusetts-Lowell, Massachusetts, United States. E-mail: Zhiyong_Gu@uml.edu; Fax: +01 978 934 3047; Tel: +01 978 934 3540
bDepartment of Chemical, Materials and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut, United States
First published on 20th January 2012
A sensor device featuring massive aligned CuO nanowires has been fabricated for H2S detection. Metallic copper (Cu) nanowires were first synthesized by a template-assisted electrodeposition method. Dielectrophoresis (DEP) and thermal oxidation were then used to assemble and functionalize/oxidize the nanowires. Topology of the CuO nanowires showed rugged surfaces on the nanowires. H2S sensing properties were characterized by conducting experiments with varying influential factors, including concentration levels from 10 to 1000 ppb and working temperatures from 25 to 420 °C. The CuO nanowire sensor showed good response and repeatability upon H2S exposure with a detection limit of 2.5 ppb and a linear response ranging from 10 ppb to 100 ppb. In addition, the study of temperature influence revealed that the highest response was achieved at 180 °C. Furthermore, with increased working temperature, the CuO nanowire sensor had shorter response and recovery times. An interesting two-stage response was discovered for this CuO nanowire sensor responding to H2S exposure, indicating that two competing reactions existed on the CuO surface.
Currently, semiconducting metal oxide chemiresistive sensors are a major type of sensor to achieve this goal, and materials such as SnO2,8 In2O3,9 CuO,10 WO3,11 ZnO,12etc., have been intensively studied and used for this purpose. Among them, CuO materials are especially favored in H2S detection due to the p-type semiconducting properties13 and unique surface chemistry with H2S.14 In recent years, with the emerging appearance of nanomaterials, new innovations have been seen in sensor technology. High surface-to-volume ratio nanostructures such as nanofibers,15 nanoflowers,16 nanoflakes17 and nanowires18 have been synthesized and studied. However, out of the limited publications on CuO nanomaterials for H2S sensing, only a few of them were focused on nanowire structure, which is more favoured for device assembly and integration. More importantly, prior works either had experiments only conducted at sub-ppm level or had a detection limit not low enough to alert early stage H2S detection at a few ppb level.
In this article, we present a novel, highly sensitive H2S sensor that features template synthesized CuO nanowires as the functional sensing component and an enhanced sensor assembling process. Nanowires were first prepared in their metallic form and then thermally oxidized to their oxide form to bring out the chemiresistive nature for sensing. During this transition, significant surface morphology change was observed. Sensor chips were fabricated using dielectrophoretic (DEP) assembly to integrate the nanowires, and the sensing performance towards exposure of H2S was measured in a dynamic testing system. An interesting two-stage sensing response of the CuO nanowires to H2S was discovered, and both temperature influence and H2S concentration were taken into account to study the sensor response variations. Finally, the sensor response from this CuO nanowire sensor was also compared with that of a SnO2 nanowire sensor.
Fig. 1 (a) A diagram of sensor chip fabrication procedure; (b) top view of sensor chip before oxidation; (c) top view of same sensor chip after oxidation |
The sensor chip was sealed into a home-made 5 cm3 glass chamber with gas inlet and outlet. The sensor circuit was subjected to a fixed 0.1 V DC, and the current reading was instantly measured by a CHI-601C electrochemical analyzer (CH Instruments Inc., Austin, TX, USA) at a sampling rate of one point per second. Dry air was used as the carrier gas to obtain H2S mixtures with concentrations ranging from 10 ppb to 1000 ppb, which was regulated by a computer-controlled gas mixing system (S-4000, Environics Inc., Tolland, CT, USA). All experiments were carried out using a flow rate at 1.8 L min−1. In a typical testing cycle, a stable baseline was first obtained by flashing dry air through the chamber for one hour before experiments, then the sample was exposed to H2S for 10 min, followed by dry air purging of 15 min to allow the sensor to recover. The electric resistance of the sensor was calculated by applying Ohm's law (R = V/I). Sensor response equals the normalized resistance change and is defined as ΔR/R0 = [(R − R0)/R0], where R0 is the initial electrical resistance of the sensor in dry air and R is the measured real-time resistance upon exposure to H2S or air.
Fig. 2 (a) SEM image of a single Cu nanowire; (b) surface morphology of Cu nanowires before oxidation; (c) surface morphology of nanowires after oxidation (CuO nanowires). |
In addition, the X-ray diffraction pattern of the oxidized nanowires was obtained. This crystallographic information could be used to justify the complete oxidation from Cu to CuO. In Fig. 3, peak intensity and 2θ angle of CuO, from the powder diffraction file (#65-2309, International Centre for Diffraction Data (ICDD)), are displayed as reference, and above it is the XRD pattern of the oxidized nanowire samples. All peaks are identified to be the characteristic peaks of CuO only, indicating the oxidation process was successful and complete.
Fig. 3 X-ray diffraction patterns of nanowires after oxidation (top) in comparison with standard CuO reference (shown in blue color, bottom). |
Fig. 4 A full test cycle of the CuO nanowire sensor responding to H2S exposure (200 ppb) at a working temperature of 180 °C. |
It is worth mentioning that during this process an interesting two-stage response was observed as the frontal curve of the response peak exhibits two distinguished slopes before reaching the plateau region. According to the literature, there are two major types of reactions regarding CuO or CuO-containing metal oxide materials with H2S. One is the oxidation of H2S with adsorbed oxygen species on the CuO surface (eqn (1) and (2)),21–23 which is very similar to the sensing mechanism of most semiconducting metal oxide materials.
H2S (ads) + 3O− (ads) → H2O + SO2 + 3e | (1) |
H2S (ads) + 3O2− (ads) → H2O + SO2 + 3e | (2) |
H2S (ads) + CuO → CuS + H2O | (3) |
These type of reactions will result in the generation of SO2 and H2O, and the return of free electrons from adsorbed oxygen to CuO. These electrons further neutralize with intrinsic holes to decrease the carrier concentration of CuO, hence an increased resistance can be measured. The other type of reaction is simply the generation of CuS (eqn (3)),10,24,25 which is a metallic-like conductor. Its impact on the material will be reduced resistance.
This two-stage dynamic response curve indicates that H2S prefers oxidation over dissociation, because the adsorbed oxygen species are more active than CuO. So it is reasonable to believe that in the first segment S1 (Fig. 4), the H2S oxidation dominates the process exclusively. With continuous H2S input, the consumption of the adsorbed oxygen on the CuO surface was kept at a rapid rate. When its concentration dropped to a certain level, that excessive amount of H2S would react with CuO directly. This triggered the formation of CuS, leading to a counter effect on the resistance change. Because of this compensation, the response curve of the second segment S2 displayed a gentle slope compared to that in S1. These two types of reaction would continue to compete until they reached a steady state, as seen in the flat area at the end of the response peak. Recovery of resistance occurred immediately after the input gas was switched back to dry air only. The same reversible response was previous reported by Chen et al.10 in a vertically aligned CuO nanowire system at 500 ppb and 1 ppm levels without further investigation on response dynamics. Here we significantly lowered the H2S exposure down to ∼10 ppb, and observed this unique two-stage response.
From this complete testing cycle, the response time tS for reaching the maximum ΔR was measured to be 42 min. Similarly, the recovery time tR was measured to be 20 min. Considering the relatively long time taken for the H2S sensing of CuO nanowires to reach the plateau stage, in the following experiments, we sampled the sensor response data upon 10 min exposure of H2S and after a 15 min recovery session, at various concentration levels and operating temperatures.
One key factor in the performance of solid-state gas sensors is the working temperature. To find out its optimum value for this CuO nanowire sensor, sensing tests towards 10 min exposure of 100 ppb H2S were conducted at 25 °C, 80 °C, 140 °C, 180 °C, 240 °C, 280 °C, 320 °C, 380 °C, and 420 °C. The dynamic response curves collected from these 9 temperature points are shown as a layout in Fig. 5a, whereas the results of response versus temperature are plotted in Fig. 5b. Although it has been well accepted that for most metal oxide materials, elevated working temperature above 300 °C is normally preferable, CuO sensors, on the other hand, have been reported to have a medium to low working temperature range of about 160–240 °C.10,26 From the results of our experiments, the highest resistance change appears at 180 °C as a 23.7% increase in resistance. Noticeably, a weak sensor response was observed at 25 °C, which is considered to be room temperature. In the high temperature region (above 300 °C), the CuO nanowire sensor still showed moderate responses to H2S of 12.2% to 16.6% resistance changes. From Fig. 5b, although the trend of how response changes with temperature was not linear or monotonic, it still showed the sensing property has a strong dependency on temperature. Since the optimized temperature for the CuO nanowire sensor is only 180 °C, it will benefit future sensor devices in terms of saving energy and causing less safety issues.
Fig. 5 (a) Dynamic response curves of the CuO nanowire sensor responding to 100 ppb H2S at different working temperatures; (b) Sensor response as a function of working temperature. |
The temperature influence can also be reflected in response kinetics. Obviously, as the testing temperature rises from 25 °C to 420 °C, the slope of the response curve becomes steeper. Similarly, the recovery process displays the same trend as faster recovery was observed at the higher working temperatures. The reason for this phenomenon could be related to the fact that, both physical adsorption/desorption and chemical reactions on the metal oxide surface are affected by the temperature. Higher temperature leads to accelerated diffusion, ionization and reaction rate, and at a macroscopic level, these add up to cause faster response and recovery. However, in the case of CuO nanowires, the pre-adsorbed oxygen concentration might be higher in the medium to low temperature range, so even though the sensing speed is better, the response is still not as good as that at lower temperatures.
After the working temperature was optimized to be 180 °C, a series of experiments were conducted at this temperature to study the sensor response at various concentration levels, beginning with 10 ppb. The results are shown in Fig. 6, as a layout of the dynamic response curves towards H2S exposure of 10, 20, 50 and 100 ppb. At 10 ppb, H2S exposure resulted in a 4.8% resistance increase, based on which the detection limit (10 min exposure) of this CuO nanowire sensor was estimated to be 2.5 ppb by S/N = 3. This very small value proved that these CuO nanowires could outperform most other metal oxide materials currently available for H2S sensing.10,24,25,26. Besides the high sensitivity, good repeatability was also demonstrated as shown in Fig. 6. At each concentration level, three subsequent exposure–purging cycles were conducted, and only small variations were observed between the three peaks.
Fig. 6 Dynamic response curves of the CuO nanowire sensor upon H2S exposure from 10 to 100 ppb; each concentration measurement was repeated three times. |
Furthermore, the tests were expanded as we measured the sensor response up to 1000 ppb, and the results are given in Fig. 7a, as response plotted versus concentration level from 10 to 1000 ppb with errors bar. This figure illustrates the trend of how sensor response increased from a few percent to over one hundred percent with the ascending temperature setting. The trend roughly follows a hyperbolic curve as most commonly seen in chemiresistive sensors—a very fast increase in the low concentration region, followed by a gentle slope in the high concentration region. According to Guidotti's toxicological report in 2010,27 the rise of respiratory illness in children has been associated with H2S exposure levels less than 100 ppb, so the capability of detecting low concentration H2S is critical for evaluating a H2S sensor’s performance. Here, special attention was paid to the linear region at the lower concentration range (10–100 ppb). In Fig. 7b, a fitted line is presented to show the linearity of the points in the lower concentration range. It is colored in red and has a slope of 0.19% per ppb, with a R-square value of 0.99846 indicating a good linearity for future device integration. Another important property in favour of device integration is the reproducibility of the CuO nanowire sensor chips. For chips that have been tested in this experiment, although the absolute resistance may slightly vary due to the variance of the density of the CuO nanowires dispersed on the electrode surfaces, the sensor response data in terms of resistance change in percent, measured under the same conditions, are fairly close.
Fig. 7 (a) Sensor response versus H2S concentration from 10 to 1000 ppb; (b) a magnified image of the linear region (the red line is a linear fitting of the experimental results). |
To further illustrate the outstanding performance of the CuO nanowires over other commonly used sensing materials such as SnO2, a SnO2 nanowire sensor was fabricated following the same procedures. Fig. 8 shows the 10 min 100 ppb H2S exposure response of CuO at 180 °C, and SnO2 nanowires at 180 °C and 420 °C. The H2S response of this particular sensor was first measured at 180 °C, which is the optimized temperature setting for CuO nanowire sensor. No obvious response peak was observed for the SnO2 sensor at 180 °C (green line) in Fig. 8. From our previous study, this is not surprising because SnO2 nanowire sensors tend to have a preferred working temperature at a relatively high temperature range.18 Even at the highest available working temperature of 420 °C, SnO2 nanowires caused only a 15% decrease in resistance. Unlike CuO, SnO2 is a typical n-type semiconducting metal oxide that has oxygen deficiency in its crystal structure. So the return of free electrons generated from the same oxidation reaction of H2S with adsorbed oxygen species, in this case, lead to decreased resistance. By comparing the sensitivity values, it is convincing that CuO has advantages over SnO2 in its lower working temperature and higher response.
Fig. 8 Sensor response of CuO nanowires at 180 °C, and SnO2 nanowires at 180 °C and 420 °C toward 100 ppb H2S exposure of 10 min and 15 min dry air purging. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2012 |