Abstract
In this paper, we comparatively analyze the gas-sensing ability of Pb, Pd and Pt metal-doped GaNNT (M-GaNNT) materials for the hazardous H2S, SO2, NH3 and Cl2 gases. The adsorption structure, adsorption energy (Eads), density of states (DOS), differential charge density and frontier molecular orbital of the M-GaNNT adsorbed hazardous gas have been studied based on the density functional theory (DFT) calculations. The results show that the energy gap of Pb-GaNNT performs the largest change with an increasing percentage change of 358 % after the Cl2 adsorption compared with that before the Cl2 adsorption, while the energy gap of Pt-GaNNT has the least change with an average value of 20.8 %. The doping of metal atoms can effectively improve the gas-sensitivity of M-GaNNT, and the gas-sensitivity follows the order of Pb-GaNNT> Pd-GaNNT> Pt-GaNNT. The potential applications of M-GaNNT in gas sensor and adsorbent are then predicted through the analysis of the adsorption energy, sensitive response (SR) and recovery time (τ). Pb-GaNNT performs the best Cl2 gas removal since the largest Eads (-5.883 eV), largest SR (4.4 × 1015) and largest τ (2.9 × 1087s) can be determined for Cl2 adsorption on Pb-GaNNT. Furthermore, Pb-GaNNT is a good NH3 gas sensor since the related τ is only 2.9 s at 498 K, and a small Eads (-1.232 eV) with large SR (9.7 × 105) can be determined as well. The research findings in this paper provide a new sensor material option for both the detection and the removal of harmful gases, and the systematically theoretical method can spread to other systems.
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