Process Controlled Ruthenium on 2D Engineered V-MXene via Atomic Layer Deposition for Human Healthcare Monitoring

Adv Sci (Weinh). 2023 Apr;10(12):e2206355. doi: 10.1002/advs.202206355. Epub 2023 Feb 22.

Abstract

In searching for unique and unexplored 2D materials, the authors try to investigate for the very first time the use of delaminated V-MXene coupled with precious metal ruthenium (Ru) through atomic layer deposition (ALD) for various contact and noncontact mode of real-time temperature sensing applications at the human-machine interface. The novel delaminated V-MXene (DM-V2 CTx ) engineered ruthenium-ALD (Ru-ALD) temperature sensor demonstrates a competitive sensing performance of 1.11% °C-1 as of only V-MXene of 0.42% °C-1 . A nearly threefold increase in sensing and reversibility performance linked to the highly ordered few-layered V-MXene and selective, well-controlled Ru atomic doping by ALD for the successful formation of Ru@DM-V2 CTX heterostructure. The advanced heterostructure formation, the mechanism, and the role of Ru have been comprehensively investigated by ultra-high-resolution transmission/scanning transmission electron microscopies coupled with next-generation spherical aberration correction technology and fast, accurate elemental mapping quantifications, also by ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy. To the knowledge, this work is the first to use the novel, optimally processed V-MXene over conventionally used Ti-MXene and its surface-internal structure engineering by Ru-ALD process-based temperature-sensing devices function and operational demonstrations. The current work could potentially motivate the development of multifunctional, future, next-generation, safe, personal healthcare electronic devices by the industrially scalable ALD technique.

Keywords: V2CTX MXene; atomic layer deposition; healthcare monitoring; human-machine interface; precious metals.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Electronics
  • Engineering
  • Humans
  • Ruthenium*
  • Thermosensing

Substances

  • MXene
  • Ruthenium