Fully Stretchable and Humidity-Resistant Quantum Dot Gas Sensors

ACS Sens. 2018 May 25;3(5):1048-1055. doi: 10.1021/acssensors.8b00263. Epub 2018 May 15.

Abstract

Stretchable gas sensors that accommodate the shape and motion characteristics of human body are indispensable to a wearable or attachable smart sensing system. However, these gas sensors usually have poor response and recovery kinetics when operated at room temperature, and especially suffer from humidity interference and mechanical robustness issues. Here, we demonstrate the first fully stretchable gas sensors which are operated at room temperature with enhanced stability against humidity. We created a crumpled quantum dot (QD) sensing layer on elastomeric substrate with flexible graphene as electrodes. Through the control over the prestrain of the flexible substrate, we achieved a 5.8 times improvement in NO2 response at room temperature with desirable stretchability even under 1000 stretch/relax cycles mechanism deformation. The uniformly wavy structural configuration of the crumpled QD gas-sensing layer enabled an improvement in the antihumidity interference. The sensor response shows a minor vibration of 15.9% at room temperature from relative humidity of 0 to 86.7% compared to that of the flat-film sensors with vibration of 84.2%. The successful assembly of QD solids into a crumpled gas-sensing layer enabled a body-attachable, mechanically robust, and humidity-resistant gas sensor, opening up a new pathway to room-temperature operable gas sensors which may be implemented in future smart sensing systems such as stretchable electronic nose and multipurpose electronic skin.

Keywords: gas sensor; humidity interference; quantum dot; room temperature; stretchable.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Electrodes
  • Gases / analysis*
  • Graphite / chemistry
  • Humans
  • Humidity*
  • Kinetics
  • Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
  • Nitrogen Dioxide / chemistry
  • Quantum Dots*
  • Temperature
  • Wearable Electronic Devices

Substances

  • Gases
  • Graphite
  • Nitrogen Dioxide