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Wearable Gas Sensor Based on Reticular Antimony-Doped SnO 2 /PANI Nanocomposite Realizing Intelligent Detection of Ammonia within a Wide Range of Humidity.

Yiwen LiYibo ZhangYun ZhouLiupeng ZhaoYuehe LinFangmeng LiuGeyu LuPeng Sun
Published in: ACS sensors (2023)
Wearable gas sensors demonstrate broad potential for environmental monitoring and breath analysis applications. Typically, they require a highly stable and high-performance flexible gas sensing unit that can work with a small, flexible circuit to enable real-time accurate concentration analysis and prediction. This work proposes a flexible gas sensor using antimony-doped tin dioxide composite polyaniline as the sensing material for room-temperature ammonia detection over a wide humidity range. The sensor exhibits high sensitivity (response value at 33.1 toward 100 ppm ammonia at 70% relative humidity), excellent selectivity, and good long-term and mechanical stability. The increased sensitivity is due to a reduction in the hole concentration of polyaniline in air, achieved through compositing and doping. Subsequently, regression analysis equations are developed to establish the relationship between the gas concentration and sensor response under varying environmental humidity conditions. The sensor was integrated with a small, low-power circuit module to form a wearable smart bracelet with signal acquisition, processing, and wireless transmission functions, which could achieve early and remote warning of gas leakage in different humidity environments. This research demonstrates a promising approach to designing high-performance, high-stability, and flexible gas sensors and their corresponding wireless sensing systems.
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