Ultra-Flexible, Breathable, and Robust PAN/MWCNTs/PANI Nanofiber Networks for High-Performance Wearable Gas Sensor Application.

ACS Sens

Key Laboratory of UV-Emitting Materials and Technology of Ministry of Education, Northeast Normal University, Changchun 130024, People's Republic of China.

Published: June 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Wearable gas sensors are gaining interest for health monitoring and environmental detection, but combining flexibility, sensitivity, robustness, and gas permeability remains a challenge with current materials.
  • A novel electrospun polyacrylonitrile (PAN) nanofiber network serves as an ultra-flexible substrate for a wearable gas sensor that includes polyaniline (PANI) and multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) as a sensitive layer.
  • This new sensor demonstrates outstanding durability and a low Young's modulus of 18.9 MPa, enabling it to maintain stable performance while being bent or stretched, and offers high sensitivity to ammonia gas with a detection limit as low as 300 ppb.

Article Abstract

Wearable gas sensors have drawn great attention for potential applications in health monitoring, minienvironment detection, and advanced soft electronic noses. However, it still remains a great challenge to simultaneously achieve excellent flexibility, high sensitivity, robustness, and gas permeability, because of the inherent limitation of widely used traditional organic flexible substrates. Herein, an electrospinning polyacrylonitrile (PAN) nanofiber network was designed as a flexible substrate, on which an ultraflexible wearable gas sensor was prepared with in situ assembled polyaniline (PANI) and multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) as a sensitive layer. The unique nanofiber network and strong binding force between substrate and sensing materials endow the wearable gas sensor with excellent robustness, flexibility, and gas permeability. The wearable sensor can maintain stable NH sensing performance while sustaining extreme bending and stretching (50% of strain). The Young's modulus of wearable PAN/MWCNTs/PANI sensor is as low as 18.9 MPa, which is several orders of magnitude smaller than those of reported flexible sensors. The water vapor transmission rate of the sensor is 0.38 g/(cm 24 h), which enables the wearing comfort of the sensor. Most importantly, due to the effective exposure of sensing sites as well as the heterostructure effect between MWCNTs and PANI, the sensor shows high sensitivity to NH at room temperature, and the theoretical limit of detection is as low as 300 ppb. This work provides a new avenue for the realization of reliable and high-performance wearable gas sensors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.4c00273DOI Listing

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