Ultrasensitive Room-Temperature Operable Gas Sensors Using p-Type Na:ZnO Nanoflowers for Diabetes Detection.
Rawat JaisuttiMinkyung LeeJaeyoung KimSeungbeom ChoiTae-Jun HaJaekyun KimHyoungsub KimSung Kyu ParkYong-Hoon KimPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2017)
Ultrasensitive room-temperature operable gas sensors utilizing the photocatalytic activity of Na-doped p-type ZnO (Na:ZnO) nanoflowers (NFs) are demonstrated as a promising candidate for diabetes detection. The flowerlike Na:ZnO nanoparticles possessing ultrathin hierarchical nanosheets were synthesized by a facile solution route at a low processing temperature of 40 °C. It was found that the Na element acting as a p-type dopant was successfully incorporated in the ZnO lattice. On the basis of the synthesized p-type Na:ZnO NFs, room-temperature operable chemiresistive-type gas sensors were realized, activated by ultraviolet (UV) illumination. The Na:ZnO NF gas sensors exhibited high gas response (S of 3.35) and fast response time (∼18 s) and recovery time (∼63 s) to acetone gas (100 ppm, UV intensity of 5 mW cm-2), and furthermore, subppm level (0.2 ppm) detection was achieved at room temperature, which enables the diagnosis of various diseases including diabetes from exhaled breath.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- ionic liquid
- quantum dots
- type diabetes
- cardiovascular disease
- label free
- gold nanoparticles
- highly efficient
- visible light
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- glycemic control
- low cost
- reduced graphene oxide
- metabolic syndrome
- signaling pathway
- immune response
- cell proliferation
- adipose tissue
- high intensity
- inflammatory response
- sensitive detection
- nuclear factor
- weight loss
- transition metal
- simultaneous determination