Precise agriculture based on intelligent agriculture plays a significant role in sustainable development. The agricultural Internet of Things (IoTs) is a crucial foundation for intelligent agriculture. However, the development of agricultural IoTs has led to exponential growth in various sensors, posing a major challenge in achieving long-term stable power supply for these distributed sensors. Introducing a self-powered active biochemical sensor can help, but current sensors have poor sensitivity and specificity making this application challenging. To overcome this limitation, a triboelectric nanogenerator (TENG)-based self-powered active urea sensor which demonstrates high sensitivity and specificity is developed. This device achieves signal enhancement by introducing a volume effect to enhance the utilization of charges through a novel dual-electrode structure, and improves the specificity of urea detection by utilizing an enzyme-catalyzed reaction. The device is successfully used to monitor the variation of urea concentration during crop growth with concentrations as low as 4 µm, without being significantly affected by common fertilizers such as potassium chloride or ammonium dihydrogen phosphate. This is the first self-powered active biochemical sensor capable of highly specific and highly sensitive fertilizer detection, pointing toward a new direction for developing self-powered active biochemical sensor systems within sustainable development-oriented agricultural IoTs.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11165538 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/advs.202309824 | DOI Listing |
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