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Royal Society of Chemistry, CrystEngComm, 5(14), p. 1701-1708

DOI: 10.1039/c1ce06197f

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Novel Zn-doped SnO2hierarchical architectures: synthesis, characterization, and gas sensing properties

Journal article published in 2012 by Peng Sun, Lu You, Yanfeng Sun, Nianke Chen, Xianbin Li ORCID, Hongbo Sun, Jian Ma, Geyu Lu
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

Novel Zn-doped SnO(2)hierarchical architectures were synthesized by a simple hydrothermal route. The observation of field-emission electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy showed that Zn-doped SnO2 hierarchical architectures were composed of one-dimensional nanocones. Interestingly, these nanocones were almost parallel to each other and knitted by other parallel nanocones. The morphology of the products could be controlled by varying the concentration of Zn2+. A possible formation mechanism was proposed from the viewpoint of nucleation and the crystal growth habit. Evidences of dopant incorporation were demonstrated in the X-ray diffraction and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy measurement of Zn-doped SnO(2)nanocones. The UV-vis absorption spectra of samples exhibited a blue shift with a decrease of the size of nanocones. Moreover, gas sensors based on the hierarchical Zn-doped SnO(2)nanocones displayed higher response to ethanol compared with the pure urchin-like SnO2 nanostructures. Finally, based on first-principles calculations, the enhancement in sensitivity toward ethanol could be explained by the strong coulomb binding between Zn-Sn and its neighboring O vacancies.