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Aerosol-Synthesized Surfactant-Free Single-Walled Carbon Nanotube-Based NO2 Sensors: Unprecedentedly High Sensitivity and Fast Recovery
  • Kim, Sihyeok ;
  • Han, Jiye ;
  • Choi, Jin Myung ;
  • Nam, Jeong Seok ;
  • Lee, Il Hyun ;
  • Lee, Yeounggyu ;
  • Novikov, Ilya V. ;
  • Kauppinen, Esko I. ;
  • Lee, Keekeun ;
  • Jeon, Il
Citations

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Publication Year
2024-06-13
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons Inc
Citation
Advanced Materials, Vol.36
Keyword
aerosol carbon nanotubesFCCVDNO2 gas detectorNO2 gas sensorssingle-walled carbon nanotubeswearable sensors
Mesh Keyword
Aerosol carbonAerosol carbon nanotubeFCCVDGas-sensorsNO2 gas detectorNO2 gas sensorSingle-walled carbonSingle-walled carbon nanotubeSurfactant-freeSynthesised
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
Materials Science (all)Mechanics of MaterialsMechanical Engineering
Abstract
This study pioneers a chemical sensor based on surfactant-free aerosol-synthesized single-walled carbon nanotube (SWCNT) films for detecting nitrogen dioxide (NO2). Unlike conventional CNTs, the SWCNTs used in this study exhibit one of the highest surface-to-volume ratios. They show minimal bundling without the need for surfactants and have the lowest number of defects among reported CNTs. Furthermore, the dry-transferrable and facile one-step lamination results in promising industrial viability. When applied to devices, the sensor shows excellent sensitivity (41.6% at 500 ppb), rapid response/recovery time (14.2/120.8 s), a remarkably low limit of detection (below ≈0.161 ppb), minimal noise, repeatability for more than 50 cycles without fluctuation, and long-term stability for longer than 6 months. This is the best performance reported for a pure CNT-based sensor. In addition, the aerosol SWCNTs demonstrate consistent gas-sensing performance even after 5000 bending cycles, indicating their suitability for wearable applications. Based on experimental and theoretical analyses, the proposed aerosol CNTs are expected to overcome the limitations associated with conventional CNT-based sensors, thereby offering a promising avenue for various sensor applications.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/34128
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/adma.202313830
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This work was supported by the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF), funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT (MSIT) of the Korean government (NRF\\u20102021R1C1C1009200, NRF\\u20102023K2A9A2A23000283, NRF\\u20102023R1A2C3007358, NRF\\u2010 RS\\u20102023\\u201000228994). Bjorn Mikladal of Canatu co ltd. contributed to the synthesis of carbon nanotubes.
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Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering
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