Multifunctional metal oxides and 2D materials utilizing carbon nanotubes as a base template for clean energy and other applications

Author(s):  
Tamie A.J. Loh ◽  
Y. Hu ◽  
K.C. Pham ◽  
Z. Tan ◽  
Daniel H.C. Chua
Author(s):  
Parthasarathy Srinivasan ◽  
Soumadri Samanta ◽  
Akshay Krishnakumar ◽  
John Bosco Balaguru Rayappan ◽  
Kamalakannan Kailasam

Over the past decades, many materials like metal oxides, conducting polymers, carbon nanotubes, 2D materials, graphene, zeolites and porous organic frameworks (MOFs and COFs) have been explored for chemo-sensing applications...


Sensors ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (22) ◽  
pp. 6694
Author(s):  
Maria Vesna Nikolic ◽  
Vladimir Milovanovic ◽  
Zorka Z. Vasiljevic ◽  
Zoran Stamenkovic

This paper presents an overview of semiconductor materials used in gas sensors, their technology, design, and application. Semiconductor materials include metal oxides, conducting polymers, carbon nanotubes, and 2D materials. Metal oxides are most often the first choice due to their ease of fabrication, low cost, high sensitivity, and stability. Some of their disadvantages are low selectivity and high operating temperature. Conducting polymers have the advantage of a low operating temperature and can detect many organic vapors. They are flexible but affected by humidity. Carbon nanotubes are chemically and mechanically stable and are sensitive towards NO and NH3, but need dopants or modifications to sense other gases. Graphene, transition metal chalcogenides, boron nitride, transition metal carbides/nitrides, metal organic frameworks, and metal oxide nanosheets as 2D materials represent gas-sensing materials of the future, especially in medical devices, such as breath sensing. This overview covers the most used semiconducting materials in gas sensing, their synthesis methods and morphology, especially oxide nanostructures, heterostructures, and 2D materials, as well as sensor technology and design, application in advance electronic circuits and systems, and research challenges from the perspective of emerging technologies.


2021 ◽  

The book covers the sensing and monitoring of poisonous carbon monoxide pollution in the environment. The sensors covered include semiconducting metal oxides, carbon nanotubes, conducting polymeric thin films, sensors based on colorimetric detection, non-dispersive infrared sensors, electrochemical sensors and photoacoustic detectors.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 ◽  
pp. 1923-1932 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shengming Zhang ◽  
Xuhui Wang ◽  
Yan Li ◽  
Xuemei Mu ◽  
Yaxiong Zhang ◽  
...  

We have successfully prepared iron oxide and nickel oxide on carbon nanotubes on carbon cloth for the use in supercapacitors via a simple aqueous reduction method. The obtained carbon cloth–carbon nanotube@metal oxide (CC-CNT@MO) three-dimensional structures combine the high specific capacitance and rich redox sites of metal oxides with the large specific area and high electrical conductivity of carbon nanotubes. The prepared CC-CNT@Fe2O3 anode reaches a high capacity of 226 mAh·g−1 at 2 A·g−1 with a capacitance retention of 40% at 40 A·g−1. The obtained CC-CNT@NiO cathode exhibits a high capacity of 527 mAh·g−1 at 2 A·g−1 and an excellent rate capability with a capacitance retention of 78% even at 40 A·g−1. The all-solid-state asymmetric supercapacitor fabricated with these two electrodes delivers a high energy density of 63.3 Wh·kg−1 at 1.6 kW·kg−1 and retains 83% of its initial capacitance after 5000 cycles. These results demonstrate that our simple aqueous reduction method to combine CNT and metal oxides reveals an exciting future in constructing high-performance supercapacitors.


2018 ◽  
Vol 50 (7) ◽  
pp. 734-743 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hassan Wahab ◽  
Mohamed M. El Gomati ◽  
Steven J. Hinder ◽  
John F. Watts

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 1568-1579 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuxian Gao ◽  
Kangmin Xie ◽  
Wendong Wang ◽  
Shiyang Mi ◽  
Ning Liu ◽  
...  

MWCNT supported CuO–CeO2 catalysts show enhanced performance in CO-PROX due to unusual structure features induced by interactions between metal oxides and MWCNT.


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