Abstract

Developing high-temperature hydrogen (H2) sensors with fast response speed is urgently demanded in harsh application environments, especially for chemical industries and the aerospace field. Herein, we have reported a facile strategy to synthesize Mn-doped In2O3 hollow nanotubes (Mn-In2O3) by solvothermal and annealing route using In-MOFs as precursors. The experimental results indicate that the obtained products possess hollow nanotube structures with plenty of holes and Mn doping greatly boosts the gas-sensing performance of In2O3-based sensors towards H2. In particular, the responses of 3 mol% Mn-In2O3 are 2.57 and 2.3 towards 50 ppm H2 at 360 °C and 400 °C, respectively, which are much higher than those of bare In2O3 hollow nanotubes. Besides, the sensor based on 3 mol% Mn-In2O3 exhibits a low limit of detection (25 ppb), excellent selectivity, rapid response/recovery speed (∼4 and ∼15 s@20 ppm), and excellent stability at high temperature (360 °C). Such enhancement of H2-sensing properties can be put down to the hollow structure derived from In-MOFs and abundant oxygen vacancy defects produced by Mn doping. The Mn-In2O3 hollow nanotubes could be regarded as promising materials for selectively detecting H2 in a wide range of concentrations.

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