2D transition metal carbides and nitrides (MXenes) open up novel opportunities in gas sensing with high sensitivity at room temperature. Herein, 2D Mo2CTx flakes with high aspect ratio are successfully synthesized. The chemiresistive effect in a sub‐µm MXene multilayer for different organic vapors and humidity at 101–104 ppm in dry air is studied. Reasonably, the low‐noise resistance signal allows the detection of H2O down to 10 ppm. Moreover, humidity suppresses the response of Mo2CTx to organic analytes due to the blocking of adsorption active sites. By measuring the impedance of MXene layers as a function of ac frequency in the 10−2–106 Hz range, it is shown that operation principle of the sensor is dominated by resistance change rather than capacitance variations. The sensor transfer function allows to conclude that the Mo2CTx chemiresistance is mainly originating from electron transport through interflake potential barriers with heights up to 0.2 eV. Density functional theory calculations, elucidating the Mo2C surface interaction with organic analytes and H2O, explain the experimental data as an energy shift of the density of states under the analyte's adsorption which induces increasing electrical resistance.
Bottom-up synthesized quasi-2D Co3O4 nanoflakes demonstrate a remarkable chemiresistive response towards chemically akin alcohol vapors in a mixture with air.
Engineering the physics and chemistry of 2D materials is a key to unlock the potential of the advanced e‐nose technologies limited by the current semiconductor technologies. Herein, the adjustment of the graphene's morphology, physics, and gas sensing properties upon its carboxylation via the developed photochemical method is demonstrated. Formation of matrices of nanoscale holes yet with the retention of the lamellar structure of the graphene layer is signified upon the introduction of up to 9.5 at% of carboxyl groups. The impact of the applied carboxylation on the conduction mechanism and electronic structure is demonstrated. The appearance of a set of the localized states in the valence band is revealed, originating from the molecular orbitals of carboxyls as is signified by the proposed approach for the identification of electronic states in graphene chemical derivatives. Given holey structure, predominance of highly affine carboxyls, and lateral inhomogeneity, the enhanced detection and discrimination of various alcohols, acetone, and ammonia vapors at room temperature is demonstrated. The opposite chemiresistive response toward ammonia in the humid air is also experimentally revealed and justified by the performed density functional theory modeling on the effect of ammonia, water, and their mix on electronic structure, and resistivity of the carboxylated graphene.
Towards the development of low-power miniature gas detectors, there is a high interest in the research of light-activated metal oxide gas sensors capable to operate at room temperature (RT). Herein, we study ZnO nanostructures grown by the electrochemical deposition method over Si/SiO2 substrates equipped by multiple Pt electrodes to serve as on-chip gas monitors and thoroughly estimate its chemiresistive performance upon exposing to two model VOCs, isopropanol and benzene, in a wide operating temperature range, from RT to 350 °C, and LED-powered UV illumination, 380 nm wavelength; the dry air and humid-enriched, 50 rel. %, air are employed as a background. We show that the UV activation allows one to get a distinctive chemiresistive signal of the ZnO sensor to isopropanol at RT regardless of the interfering presence of H2O vapors. On the contrary, the benzene vapors do not react with UV-illuminated ZnO at RT under dry air while the humidity’s appearance gives an opportunity to detect this gas. Still, both VOCs are well detected by the ZnO sensor under heating at a 200–350 °C range independently on additional UV exciting. We employ quantum chemical calculations to explain the differences between these two VOCs’ interactions with ZnO surface by a remarkable distinction of the binding energies characterizing single molecules, which is −0.44 eV in the case of isopropanol and −3.67 eV in the case of benzene. The full covering of a ZnO supercell by H2O molecules taken for the effect’s estimation shifts the binding energies to −0.50 eV and −0.72 eV, respectively. This theory insight supports the experimental observation that benzene could not react with ZnO surface at RT under employed LED UV without humidity’s presence, indifference to isopropanol.
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