A ZnO-ordered macroporous film sensor integrated with standing nanosheets was in situ constructed based on electrodeposition, and exhibited enhanced sensitivity to ethanol gas.
A new magnetic recyclable photocatalyst, consisting of a Ni/CdS double‐walled hollow microsphere based on a polymer microsphere template, was constructed entirely by use of a photochemical method. Under an ultraviolet lamp, the poly(styrene‐co‐acrylamide) microsphere template, the Ni magnetic wall and the CdS wall were fabricated in sequence in corresponding precursor solutions, and then the template was remove to obtain the structure. Both walls were mesoporous and molecularly passable, and their sequential assembly facilitated their respective roles in photocatalysis. The CdS wall was assembled on the outside of the structure to maximize exposure to its active sites, whereas the Ni wall was inside the structure and acted as a support, as a magnetic component, and also as an heterogeneous enhancer. When the structure was employed in photodegradation of methylene blue or in photocatalytic hydrogen evolution from water under visible light, it exhibited considerably enhanced activities, recyclability and stability compared to pure CdS hollow microspheres. Such a construction strategy using simply light energy is promising in the acquisition of high performance photocatalysts with recyclability or other functions.
Based on an electrodeposition-based method, semiconductor film gas-sensors with excellent sensing performances were constructed in situ on a graphite-coating-covered ceramic tube.
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