Fully Flexible MXene-based Gas Sensor on Paper for Highly Sensitive Room-Temperature Nitrogen Dioxide Detection.

ACS Sens

Key Laboratory of Thin Film and Microfabrication (Ministry of Education), Department of Micro/Nano Electronics, School of Electronic Information and Electrical Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai200240, P. R. China.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Flexible chemiresistive gas sensors are now gaining attention for their ability to quickly and accurately detect gases, but traditional metal electrodes have limited their performance due to poor charge transfer.
  • A novel fully flexible paper-based gas sensor was developed using TiCT-MXene nonmetallic electrodes integrated with a TiCT/WS gas sensing film, resulting in improved charge transfer and gas sensing capabilities.
  • The new sensor showed a remarkable response to NO gas at room temperature, outperforming conventional designs significantly and offering excellent stability, particularly in humid conditions, paving the way for advanced designs in flexible gas sensors.

Article Abstract

Flexible chemiresistive gas sensors have attracted growing interest due to their capability in real-time and rapid detection of gas. However, the performance of gas sensors has long been hindered by the poor charge transfer ability between the conventional metal electrode and gas sensing semiconductors. Herein, for the first time, a fully flexible paper-based gas sensor integrated with the TiCT-MXene nonmetallic electrode and the TiCT/WS gas sensing film was designed to form Ohmic contact and Schottky heterojunction in a single gas sensing channel. TiCT/WS has outstanding physical and chemical properties for both TiCT and WS nanoflakes, showing high conductivity, effective charge transfer, and abundant active sites for gas sensing. The response of the gas sensor to NO (1 ppm) at room temperature is 15.2%, which is about 3.2 and 76.0 times as high as that of the Au interdigital electrode integrated with the TiCT/WS sensor (4.8%) and the MXene electrode integrated with the TiCT sensor (0.2%), respectively. Besides, this design performed at a limit of detection with 11.0 ppb NO gas and displayed excellent stability under high humidities. Based on first-principles density functional theory calculation results, the improvement of the gas sensing performance can be mainly attributed to the heterojunction regulation effect, work function matching, and suppressing metal-induced gap states. This work provides a new approach for the design of flexible gas sensors on paper with MXene-based conductive electrodes and gas sensing materials.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.2c01748DOI Listing

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