Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10410885 | Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical | 2005 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
The relevance of sensor response to CO and H2 with the microstructure of the sensing body was investigated for thick-film devices using Co3O4(0.5Â mass%)-SnO2 composites. When the composite was prepared from constituent oxides by milling in a satellite ball mill for various spans of time (1-12Â h), the sensor response to 100Â ppm CO, defined as the ratio of the electrical resistance in air to that in the sample gas, was found to reach a maximum as large as about 800 at 6Â h of ball-milling (BM). The response to H2, in contrast, showed no such marked promotion. SEM observation of the granular state and pore size distribution analyses indicated that increasing BM time gave rise especially to an increase in the volume of pores in the pore size range of 20-35Â nm. It is suggested that such a change in microstructure is responsible for the marked promotion of the response to CO, while the same change is not so much effective on the response to the gas (H2) with a much larger diffusion coefficient. For comparison, the composite prepared by an impregnation method was also subjected to the BM treatments. In this case, the response to CO could not be promoted so much even after BM for 18Â h, because the heavy coagulations of grains formed in the impregnation process were prevented from being pulverized by BM.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Shunji Abe, U-Sung Choi, Kengo Shimanoe, Noboru Yamazoe,