Highly Sensitive Sub-ppm CH3COOH Detection by Improved Assembly of Sn3O4-RGO Nanocomposite

Molecules. 2022 Dec 8;27(24):8707. doi: 10.3390/molecules27248707.

Abstract

Detection of sub-ppm acetic acid (CH3COOH) is in demand for environmental gas monitoring. In this article, we propose a CH3COOH gas sensor based on Sn3O4 and reduced graphene oxide (RGO), where the assembly of Sn3O4-RGO nanocomposites is dependent on the synthesis method. Three nanocomposites prepared by three different synthesis methods are investigated. The optimum assembly is by hydrothermal reactions of Sn4+ salts and pre-reduced RGO (designated as RS nanocomposite). Raman spectra verified the fingerprint of RGO in the synthesized RS nanocomposite. The Sn3O4 planes of (111), (210), (130), (13¯2) are observed from the X-ray diffractogram, and its average crystallite size is 3.94 nm. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy on Sn3d and O1s spectra confirm the stoichiometry of Sn3O4 with Sn:O ratio = 0.76. Sn3O4-RGO-RS exhibits the highest response of 74% and 4% at 2 and 0.3 ppm, respectively. The sensitivity within sub-ppm CH3COOH is 64%/ppm. Its superior sensing performance is owing to the embedded and uniformly wrapped Sn3O4 nanoparticles on RGO sheets. This allows a massive relative change in electron concentration at the Sn3O4-RGO heterojunction during the on/off exposure of CH3COOH. Additionally, the operation is performed at room temperature, possesses good repeatability, and consumes only ~4 µW, and is a step closer to the development of a commercial CH3COOH sensor.

Keywords: CH3COOH; Sn3O4 nanoparticles; heterojunction; reduced graphene oxide.

MeSH terms

  • Graphite* / chemistry
  • Nanocomposites* / chemistry
  • Nanoparticles* / chemistry

Substances

  • graphene oxide
  • Graphite

Grants and funding

This research was funded by Research University Grant UKM (GUP-2019-014) and UTMFR-22H16.