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Proceeding Paper

Understanding the Sensing Mechanism of Rh2O3 loaded In2O3  †

Institute of Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, Eberhard Karls University Tübingen, 72076 Tübingen, Germany
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Presented at the Eurosensors 2018 Conference, Graz, Austria, 9–12 September 2018.
Published: 6 December 2018
(This article belongs to the Proceedings of EUROSENSORS 2018)

Abstract

:
The effect of Rh loading on CO sensing was studied for the case of In2O3. This was done by performing measurements with sensors based on loaded and unloaded materials that were performed at an operation temperature of 300 °C in the presence of low background oxygen concentration according to an experimental procedure that was demonstrated to help clarify the reception/transduction functions of loaded Semiconducting Metal Oxides (SMOX). The experimental investigation methods were DC resistance and Diffuse Reflectance Infrared Fourier Transform Spectroscopy (DRIFTS). The results indicate that in the case of Rh2O3 loaded In2O3 the reaction primary takes place on the Rh2O3 cluster and the electrical properties of the In2O3 are controlled by the pinning of the SMOX Fermi-level to the one of the Rh2O3 cluster.

1. Introduction

Gas sensors based on noble metal loaded SMOX, such as Au, Pt, Pd or Rh, are utilized to solve many applications. The way in which the noble metal additives are influencing the sensitivity, selectivity as well as the stability of the SMOX gas sensors is a hot topic of research and there are many concepts discussed in the research community. On the opposite of the case of loaded SnO2 and, lately, WO3 very little is known about loaded In2O3 even if its sensing performance is quite interesting.
In order to gain fundamental insights on this topic, 0.5 and 1 at% Rh2O3-loaded In2O3, were chosen as model samples—the investigating approach is inspired by the work described in [1,2], because it was demonstrated that it helped the prevalence of a Fermi-level control mechanism that explained the gas sensing performance. Besides the loaded samples, an unloaded one was used as a reference; all sensors were operated at 300 °C. DC electrical resistance measurements and operando-DRIFTS investigations were performed during exposure to different concentrations of CO in a background of 50 ppm oxygen in N2.

2. Materials and Methods

Unloaded sample. To have a reference and the same conditions as the loaded materials, the unloaded In2O3 sample, purchases from Sigma Aldrich, was prepared like the loaded material as follows: the powder was suspended in deionized water at a pH value of 1.0, stirred at 80 °C for two hours and dried at 70 °C. The powder is labeled pure-In2O3.
Rh2O3-loaded samples. The 0.5 at% and 1.0 at% Rh2O3 loaded In2O3 were prepared as described in [3]: 1.5 g of In2O3 and 0.0055 g/0.0113 g of RhCl3xH2O from Sigma Aldrich were stirred in deionized water at a pH value of 1 at 80 °C for two hours and dried at 70 °C. The powders are labeled 0.5Rh-In2O3 and 1.0Rh-In2O3 for 0.5 at% Rh2O3 loaded In2O3 and 1.0 at% Rh2O3 loaded In2O3, respectively. The three powders were deposited onto alumina substrates described elsewhere [4]. The DRIFTS measurements were performed at Bruker Vertex 80v at 300 °C under CO (25, 50, 10, 200 and 400 ppm) in nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen in the background. DC resistance measurements were performed simultaneously. The displayed absorbance spectra were obtained by referring the single channel spectra under exposure to the target gases to the spectra gained under carrier gas:
absorbance = −log(sample spectrum/reference spectrum)

3. Results and Discussion

Figure 1 shows the DC resistance measurements and DRIFTS absorbance spectra of the three sensors during the exposure to CO in nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen. At the first glance, the DC resistance measurements in Figure (1a) reveal an influence of the loading on the baseline resistance: most probably, the p-n-heterojunction between the Rh2O3 cluster and In2O3 support material leads to a diffusion of the electrons of In2O3 to the noble metal oxide cluster to balance the Fermi-levels of both materials. This is followed by a depletion layer and consequently a higher baseline resistance.
The chosen CO concentrations correspond to below (25 and 50 ppm), nearly (100 ppm) and above (200 and 400 ppm) the stoichiometric conditions for the oxidation of CO to CO2:
2 CO + O2 →2 CO2
In these conditions, all sensors show a reduction of the resistance with increasing CO concentration. While for pure-In2O3 the decrease of the DC resistance proceeds gradually, for 0.5Rh-In2O3, however, a slight drop is observable when the CO concentration exceeds the stoichiometric conditions. For 1.0Rh-In2O3, the drop in the resistance is more pronounced.
The simultaneously acquired DRIFT spectra reveal a change in the sensing mechanisms: in the case of pure-In2O3 in Figure (1b) all CO concentration exposures determine the decrease of the In-O bands centered at 1517, 1274, 1108 and 1022 cm−1 [5]. This indicates the reduction of the surface of this material. For 0.5Rh-In2O3, which is shown in Figure (1c), the decrease of the In-O bands appear for all CO concentrations as well, but in this case, as soon as the conditions in which the slight drop in the resistance is observed, an additional band centered at 2028 cm−1 appears. This can be assigned to a rhodium carbonyl Rh-CO group [6]. A similar observation can be made for 1.0Rh-In2O3 in Figure (1d), but this time, the decrease of the In-O bands appear just in the same conditions in which the large drop in the resistance was observed, thus beyond the stoichiometric conditions. At this point, also here the occurrence of Rh-CO band can be observed. These observations indicate that the reaction primarily takes place on the Rh2O3 cluster—when the stoichiometric conditions are reached and exceeded, the Rh2O3 clusters are fully reduced to metallic Rh (indicated by the Rh-CO band) since they cannot be reoxidized and the reaction moves to the surface of In2O3 (indicated by the decreasing In-O bands).
In the literature, two reaction mechanisms are considered: the spill over mechanism and the Fermi-level pinning. In the spill over mechanism, the molecule is adsorbed on the noble metal cluster. This leads to a weakening of the molecular bond and the spillover of the so prepared adsorbate onto the support material where the reaction takes place [7]. In the Fermi-level pinning, the gas detection reaction takes place on the surface of the noble metal cluster, which interacts with the SMOX with a different work function. The contact pins the Fermi-levels of the two materials. If the electrical property of the noble metal cluster is changed, the depletion caused by the contact is changed as well. This will cause a change in the resistance of the sensing layer [8]. The findings, made in this work, suggest that the Fermi-level pinning dominates the sensing mechanism: it could be indirectly shown that the reaction takes place on the Rh2O3 cluster. As soon as the cluster is fully reduced to metallic Rh, the reaction is released on In2O3, indicated by the decreasing In-O bands in overstoichiometric conditions where the noble metal cluster cannot be reoxidized.

4. Conclusions

It is shown that it is spectroscopically possible to understand the reaction mechanism of loaded In2O3 gas sensing material. The results are in line with the findings for Pt-loaded SnO2 and Rh-loaded WO3 and suggest that the Fermi-level control can also be assumed for the loading of In2O3 with Rh2O3.

Author Contributions

All authors contributed equally to this work.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

References

  1. Staerz, A.; Kim, T.-H.; Lee, J.-H.; Weimar, U.; Barsan, N. Nanolevel Control of Gas Sensing Characteristics via p–n Heterojunction between Rh2O3 Clusters and WO3 Crystallites. J. Phys. Chem. C 2017, 121, 24701–24706. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
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Figure 1. (a) DC resistance measurement of pure-In2O3, 0.5Rh-In2O3 and 1.0Rh-In2O3 under 25, 50, 100, 200 and 400 ppm CO in nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen in the background. Absorbance spectra of (b) pure-In2O3, (c) 0.5Rh-In2O3 and (d) 1.0Rh-In2O3 under 25, 50, 100, 200 and 400 ppm CO in nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen in the background, reference spectra: nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen.
Figure 1. (a) DC resistance measurement of pure-In2O3, 0.5Rh-In2O3 and 1.0Rh-In2O3 under 25, 50, 100, 200 and 400 ppm CO in nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen in the background. Absorbance spectra of (b) pure-In2O3, (c) 0.5Rh-In2O3 and (d) 1.0Rh-In2O3 under 25, 50, 100, 200 and 400 ppm CO in nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen in the background, reference spectra: nitrogen with 50 ppm oxygen.
Proceedings 02 00754 g001
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MDPI and ACS Style

Boehme, I.; Herrmann, S.; Staerz, A.; Brinkmann, H.; Weimar, U.; Barsan, N. Understanding the Sensing Mechanism of Rh2O3 loaded In2O3 . Proceedings 2018, 2, 754. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/proceedings2130754

AMA Style

Boehme I, Herrmann S, Staerz A, Brinkmann H, Weimar U, Barsan N. Understanding the Sensing Mechanism of Rh2O3 loaded In2O3 . Proceedings. 2018; 2(13):754. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/proceedings2130754

Chicago/Turabian Style

Boehme, Inci, Sina Herrmann, Anna Staerz, Helena Brinkmann, Udo Weimar, and Nicolae Barsan. 2018. "Understanding the Sensing Mechanism of Rh2O3 loaded In2O3 " Proceedings 2, no. 13: 754. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/proceedings2130754

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