Lingyao Meng’s research while affiliated with Wuhan University and other places

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Publications (1)


X-ray diffraction pattern taken for the surface of a pellet of 1 wt% Pt after being sintered at 825 °C for 2 h in air
SEM micrographs for a pellet of 1 wt% Pt after being sintered at 825 °C for 2 h in air: a an SEM micrograph; b an SEM micrograph with EDS analysis.
Resistance responses of a sample of 1 wt% Pt sintered at 825 °C to a series of concentrations of H2 in 20% O2–N2at room temperature (25 °C), and recovery in air of 30, 50, and 70% RH, separately
Resistance responses to 1% H2 in 20% O2–N2 and recovery in air of 50% RH at room temperature for a sample as-sintered, and after a series of aging time periods of 3 h, 12 h, 24 h, 72 h and 168 h, separately
Resistance responses to 1% H2 in 20% O2–N2 and recovery in air of 50% RH at room temperature for a sample after 3 months of aging, and then being heat-treated at a series of temperatures (110, 120, 125, 130, 135, 140, and 150 °C), separately

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Aging and activation of room temperature hydrogen sensitive Pt–SnO2 composite nanoceramics
  • Article
  • Publisher preview available

August 2022

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30 Reads

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12 Citations

Journal of Materials Science

Yong Huang

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Feng Chen

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Lingyao Meng

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[...]

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Wanping Chen

Room temperature gas-sensitive metal oxides have received growing concern over their long-term stability in recent years. Presently, Pt-SnO2 composite nanoceramics of 1 wt% Pt have been prepared, and the time dependence of their room temperature hydrogen sensing capability has been carefully studied. A strong variation with time was observed, with the room temperature response to 1% H2− 20% O2–N2 decreased by a factor of several dozen after only one week. Heat treatments were found highly effective to activate those aged samples. Their room temperature hydrogen sensing capability was almost completely restored through 10 min heat treatments at temperatures as low as 130 °C. It is proposed that impurity gases in air slowly deposit on Pt in Pt–SnO2 composite nanoceramics, and the catalytic role of Pt is deactivated by the deposition and then activated after their desorption through heat treatments. These results suggest that periodic mild heat treatments can be a simple and feasible way for some room temperature gas-sensitive metal oxides to maintain a high long-term stability.

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Citations (1)


... No characteristic peaks of other substances occurred in the spectrum, suggesting that the sintering had not led to the formation of any impurities. The ceramic samples prepared in this study were thus composites of rutile SnO 2 and cubic Pt, which agrees with those previous reports [30,36]. ...

Reference:

Greatly improved room-temperature CO-sensing capability of Pt–SnO2 composite nanoceramics prepared using solution reduction Pt-loading method
Aging and activation of room temperature hydrogen sensitive Pt–SnO2 composite nanoceramics

Journal of Materials Science