Quantum Confinement and End-Sealing Effects for Highly Sensitive and Stable Nitrogen Dioxide Detection: Homogeneous Integration of Ti 3 C 2 T x -Based Flexible Gas Sensors.
Wenjing QuanJia ShiMin ZengBin LiZhou LiuWen LvChao FanJian WuXue LiuJianhua YangNantao HuZhi YangPublished in: ACS sensors (2024)
The real-time and room-temperature detection of nitrogen dioxide (NO 2 ) holds significant importance for environmental monitoring. However, the performance of NO 2 sensors has been hampered by the trade-off between the high sensitivity and stability of conventional sensitive materials. Here, we present a novel fully flexible paper-based gas sensing structure by combining a homogeneous screen-printed titanium carbide (Ti 3 C 2 T x ) MXene-based nonmetallic electrode with a MoS 2 quantum dots/Ti 3 C 2 T x (MoS 2 QDs/Ti 3 C 2 T x ) gas-sensing film. These precisely designed gas sensors demonstrate an improved response value (16.3% at 5 ppm) and a low theoretical detection limit of 12.1 ppb toward NO 2 , which exhibit a remarkable 3.5-fold increase in sensitivity compared to conventional Au interdigital electrodes. The outstanding performance can be attributed to the integration of the quantum confinement effect of MoS 2 QDs and the conductivity of Ti 3 C 2 T x , establishing the main active adsorption sites and enhanced charge transport pathways. Furthermore, an end-sealing effect strategy was applied to decorate the defect sites with naturally oxygen-rich tannic acid and conductive polymer, and the formed hydrogen bonding network at the interface effectively mitigated the oxidative degradation of the Ti 3 C 2 T x -based gas sensors. The exceptional stability has been achieved with only a 1.8% decrease in response over 4 weeks. This work highlights the innovative design of high-performance gas sensing materials and homogeneous gas sensor techniques.