Title of article
XPS study on the correlation between chemical state and oxygen-sensing properties of an iron oxide thin film
Author/Authors
M. Aronniemi، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
7
From page
9476
To page
9482
Abstract
We have studied the correlation between the chemical state and the oxygen-sensing properties of an iron oxide thin film using a setup that allows simultaneous sensor resistance measurements and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) data acquisition. The gas exposures were performed at the highest operating pressure of the XPS spectrometer at a controlled sample temperature which allows direct comparison between the sensor response and the chemical state of the surface. The iron oxide film was modified by a sequence of argon ion sputtering steps and the induced changes in the chemical state, resistance, and sensitivity to oxygen were investigated. The sputtering was found to reduce the iron from the Fe3+ to the Fe2+ state and to decrease the sensor resistance. The measured sensitivity to oxygen first increased by a factor of two but then collapsed to its original level. The mechanism for oxygen sensing was found to be filling of the oxygen vacancies in the lattice. The effect of the sputtering on the resistance and sensitivity could be explained first with an increase in the density of oxygen vacancies and then, as the iron became more reduced, with an increase in the p-type conductivity.
Keywords
XPS , Iron oxide , Thin film , Gas sensor , factor analysis , Oxygen , Chemical state
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Record number
1004363
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