Highly oriented UHMWPE films were reinforced with functionalized graphene nanoplates (GNP). GNP was functionalized by deposition of polyaniline (PANI) on the GNP surface. The structure of GNP/PANI was studied by Raman spectroscopy, and the structure of xerogels and films based on UHMWPE was studied by DSC and SEM. PANI promotes the reduction of the GNP aggregation in the UHMWPE matrix and increases the degree of crystallinity due to heterogeneous crystallization. The new lamellar crystal structure has a high drawability. The highest value of the tensile strength 1330 MPa (an increase of 45%) was obtained with a filler content of 2 wt % GNP/PANI, and the highest value of Young’s modulus 41 GPa (an increase of 32%) was obtained with a filler content of 1 wt % GNP/PANI. The effect of GNP with PANI fillers on the dynamic mechanical properties of the UHMWPE films was discussed.
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.
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