Abstract

Polyaniline nanofibers were deposited on either gold or platinum electrodes and used as resistive sensors for the detection of hydrogen. In earlier work (J. Phys. Chem. B 2006, 110, 22266−22270), we showed that hydrogen interacts directly with polyaniline nanofibers to induce a small resistance decrease (−3%) at low concentrations of hydrogen (1%) using gold electrodes. This work showed that the sensor response on gold electrodes is due to hydrogen interaction with the polyaniline nanofibers. However, with platinum electrodes a much larger resistance increase (+65%) is observed under the same conditions. The sensor response on platinum electrodes is due to hydrogen interaction with platinum at the polyaniline−platinum interface. Hydrogen facilitates the formation of a Schottky barrier between platinum and polyaniline through a change in work function as platinum is converted to platinum hydride. The work function of polyaniline nanofibers was measured, and a model for sensor response is presented based on...

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