Journal article
Journal of Hazardous Materials, 2022
APA
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Park, J. Y., Kwak, Y., Lim, H.-R., Park, S.-woo, Lim, M., Cho, H.-B., … Choa, Y. (2022). Tuning the sensing responses towards room-temperature hypersensitive methanol gas sensor using exfoliated graphene-enhanced ZnO quantum dot nanostructures. Journal of Hazardous Materials.
Chicago/Turabian
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Park, Ji Young, Yeonsu Kwak, Hyo-Ryoung Lim, Si-woo Park, M. Lim, Hong-Baek Cho, N. Myung, and Y. Choa. “Tuning the Sensing Responses towards Room-Temperature Hypersensitive Methanol Gas Sensor Using Exfoliated Graphene-Enhanced ZnO Quantum Dot Nanostructures.” Journal of Hazardous Materials (2022).
MLA
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Park, Ji Young, et al. “Tuning the Sensing Responses towards Room-Temperature Hypersensitive Methanol Gas Sensor Using Exfoliated Graphene-Enhanced ZnO Quantum Dot Nanostructures.” Journal of Hazardous Materials, 2022.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{ji2022a,
title = {Tuning the sensing responses towards room-temperature hypersensitive methanol gas sensor using exfoliated graphene-enhanced ZnO quantum dot nanostructures.},
year = {2022},
journal = {Journal of Hazardous Materials},
author = {Park, Ji Young and Kwak, Yeonsu and Lim, Hyo-Ryoung and Park, Si-woo and Lim, M. and Cho, Hong-Baek and Myung, N. and Choa, Y.}
}
A suitable and non-invasive methanol sensor workable in ambient temperature conditions with a high response has gained wide interest to prevent detrimental consequences for industrial workers from its low-level intoxication. In this work, we present a tunable and highly responsive ppb-level methanol gas sensor device working at room temperature via a bottom-up synthetic approach using exfoliated graphene sheet (EGs) and ZnO quantum dots (QDs) on an aluminum anodic oxide (AAO) template. It is verified that EGs-supported AAO with a vertical electrode configuration enabled high and fast-responsive methanol sensing. Moreover, the hydroxyl and carboxyl groups of the high surface area EGs and ZnO QDs with a 3.37 eV bandgap efficiently absorbing UV light led to 56 times high response due to the enhanced polarization on the sensor surface compared to non-UV-radiated EGs/AAO at 800 ppb of methanol. The optimal resonance frequency of methanol is determined to be 100 kHz, which could detect methanol with high response of 2.65% at 100 ppm. The limit of detection (LOD) concentration is obtained at 2 ppb level. This study demonstrates the potential of UV-assisted ZnO, EGs, and AAO-based capacitance sensor material for rapidly detecting hazardous gaseous light organic molecules at ambient conditions, and the overall approach can be easily expanded to a novel non-invasive monitoring strategy for light and hazardous volatile organic exposures.