Highly Sensitive Flexible NH3 Sensors Based on Printed Organic Transistors with Fluorinated Conjugated Polymers.
Benjamin Nketia-YawsonA-Ra JungYohan NohGi-Seong RyuGrace Dansoa TabiKyung-Koo LeeBongSoo KimYong-Young NohPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
Understanding the sensing mechanism in organic chemical sensors is essential for improving the sensing performance such as detection limit, sensitivity, and other response/recovery time, selectivity, and reversibility for real applications. Here, we report a highly sensitive printed ammonia (NH3) gas sensor based on organic thin film transistors (OTFTs) with fluorinated difluorobenzothiadiazole-dithienosilole polymer (PDFDT). These sensors detected NH3 down to 1 ppm with high sensitivity (up to 56%) using bar-coated ultrathin (<4 nm) PDFDT layers without using any receptor additives. The sensing mechanism was confirmed by cyclic voltammetry, hydrogen/fluorine nuclear magnetic resonance, and UV/visible absorption spectroscopy. PDFDT-NH3 interactions comprise hydrogen bonds and electrostatic interactions between the PDFDT polymer backbone and NH3 gas molecules, thus lowering the highest occupied molecular orbital levels, leading to hole trapping in the OTFT sensors. Additionally, density functional theory calculations show that gaseous NH3 molecules are captured via cooperation of fluorine atoms and dithienosilole units in PDFDT. We verified that incorporation of functional groups that interact with a specific gas molecule in a conjugated polymer is a promising strategy for producing high-performance printed OTFT gas sensors.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- low cost
- density functional theory
- ionic liquid
- magnetic resonance
- perovskite solar cells
- molecular dynamics
- photodynamic therapy
- positron emission tomography
- water soluble
- molecular dynamics simulations
- label free
- fluorescent probe
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- molecularly imprinted
- solar cells