Self-Powered Portable Nanowire Array Gas Sensor for Dynamic NO 2 monitoring at room temperature.
Shiyu WeiZhe LiKrishnan MurugappanZiyuan LiFanlu ZhangAswani Gopakumar SaraswathyvilasamMykhaylo LysevychHark Hoe TanChennupati JagadishAntonio TricoliLan FuPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2022)
The fast development of the Internet of Things (IoT) has driven an increasing consumer demand of self-powered gas sensors for real-time data collection and autonomous responses in industries such as environmental monitoring, workplace safety, smart cities, and personal healthcare. Despite intensive research and rapid progress in the field, most reported self-powered devices, specifically NO 2 sensors for air pollution monitoring, have limited sensitivity, selectivity, and scalability. Here, a novel photovoltaic self-powered NO 2 sensor is demonstrated based on axial p-i-n homojunction InP nanowire (NW) arrays, that overcome these limitations. The optimized innovative InP NW array device was designed by numerical simulation for insights into sensing mechanisms and performance enhancement. Without a power source, this InP NW sensor achieves an 84% sensing response to 1 ppm NO 2 and records a limit of detection down to the sub-ppb level, with little dependence on the incident light intensity, even under <5% of 1 sun illumination. Based on this great environmental fidelity, the sensor was integrated onto a commercial microchip interface to evaluate its performance in the context of dynamic environmental monitoring of motor vehicle exhaust. Our results show that compound semiconductor nanowires can form promising self-powered sensing platforms suitable for future mega-scale IoT systems. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- healthcare
- air pollution
- human health
- low cost
- high throughput
- cardiovascular disease
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- life cycle
- electronic health record
- high density
- lung function
- cystic fibrosis
- risk assessment
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- reduced graphene oxide
- quantum dots
- single cell