Instant‐in‐Air Liquid Metal Printed Ultrathin Tin Oxide for High‐Performance Ammonia Sensors

Author:

Nguyen Chung Kim1,Taylor Patrick D.2,Zavabeti Ali13,Alluhaybi Hamidah4,Almalki Samira4,Guo Xiangyang1,Irfan Mehmood1,Kobaisi Mohammad Al4,Ippolito Samuel J.14ORCID,Spencer Michelle J.S.2ORCID,Balendhran Sivacarendran5ORCID,Roberts Ann56,Daeneke Torben1ORCID,Crozier Kenneth B.567,Sabri Ylias14,Syed Nitu156ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Engineering RMIT University Melbourne VIC 3001 Australia

2. ARC Centre of Excellence in Future Low‐Energy Electronics School of Science RMIT University Melbourne VIC 3001 Australia

3. Department of Chemical Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville VIC 3010 Australia

4. Centre for Advanced Materials and Industrial Chemistry (CAMIC) School of Science RMIT University Melbourne VIC 3001 Australia

5. School of Physics The University of Melbourne Parkville VIC 3010 Australia

6. ARC Centre of Excellence for Transformative Meta‐Optical Systems The University of Melbourne Parkville VIC 3010 Australia

7. Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering The University of Melbourne Parkville VIC 3010 Australia

Abstract

AbstractLiquid metal‐based printing techniques are emerging as an exemplary platform for harvesting non‐layered 2D materials with a thickness down to a few nanometres, leading to an ultra‐large surface‐area‐to‐volume ratio that is ideal for sensing applications. In this work, the synthesis of 2D tin dioxide (SnO2) by exfoliating the surface oxide of molten tin is reported which highlights the enhanced sensing capability of the obtained materials to ammonia (NH3) gas is reported. It is demonstrated that amperometric gas sensors based on liquid metal‐derived 2D SnO2 nanosheets can achieve excellent NH3 sensing performance at low temperature (150 °C) with and without UV light assistance. Detection over a wide range of NH3 concentrations (5–500 ppm) is observed, revealing a limit of detection at the parts per billion (ppb) level. The 2D SnO2 nanosheets also feature excellent cross‐interference performance toward different organic and inorganic gas species, showcasing a high selectivity. Further, ab initio DFT calculations reveal the NH3 adsorption mechanism is dominated by chemisorption with a charge transfer into 2D SnO2 nanosheets. In addition, a proof of concept for prototype flexible ammonia sensors is demonstrated by depositing 2D SnO2 on a polyimide substrate, signifying the high potential of employing liquid metal printed SnO2 for realizing wearable gas sensors.

Funder

University of Melbourne

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Electrochemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,Biomaterials,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials

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