Cao Jiacheng, Chen Qian, Wang Xiaoshan, Zhang Qiang, Yu Hai-Dong, Huang Xiao, Huang Wei
Frontiers Science Center for Flexible Electronics, Xi'an Institute of Flexible Electronics (IFE), and Xi'an Institute of Biomedical Materials & Engineering, Northwestern Polytechnical University, 127 West Youyi Road, Xi'an 710072, China.
Key Laboratory of Flexible Electronics (KLOFE) & Institute of Advanced Materials (IAM), Nanjing Tech University (NanjingTech), 30 South Puzhu Road, Nanjing 211800, China.
Research (Wash D C). 2021 Apr 21;2021:9863038. doi: 10.34133/2021/9863038. eCollection 2021.
Sensors, capable of detecting trace amounts of gas molecules or volatile organic compounds (VOCs), are in great demand for environmental monitoring, food safety, health diagnostics, and national defense. In the era of the Internet of Things (IoT) and big data, the requirements on gas sensors, in addition to sensitivity and selectivity, have been increasingly placed on sensor simplicity, room temperature operation, ease for integration, and flexibility. The key to meet these requirements is the development of high-performance gas sensing materials. Two-dimensional (2D) atomic crystals, emerged after graphene, have demonstrated a number of attractive properties that are beneficial to gas sensing, such as the versatile and tunable electronic/optoelectronic properties of metal chalcogenides (MCs), the rich surface chemistry and good conductivity of MXenes, and the anisotropic structural and electronic properties of black phosphorus (BP). While most gas sensors based on 2D atomic crystals have been incorporated in the setup of a chemiresistor, field-effect transistor (FET), quartz crystal microbalance (QCM), or optical fiber, their working principles that involve gas adsorption, charge transfer, surface reaction, mass loading, and/or change of the refractive index vary from material to material. Understanding the gas-solid interaction and the subsequent signal transduction pathways is essential not only for improving the performance of existing sensing materials but also for searching new and advanced ones. In this review, we aim to provide an overview of the recent development of gas sensors based on various 2D atomic crystals from both the experimental and theoretical investigations. We will particularly focus on the sensing mechanisms and working principles of the related sensors, as well as approaches to enhance their sensing performances. Finally, we summarize the whole article and provide future perspectives for the development of gas sensors with 2D materials.
能够检测痕量气体分子或挥发性有机化合物(VOCs)的传感器在环境监测、食品安全、健康诊断和国防等领域有巨大需求。在物联网(IoT)和大数据时代,除了灵敏度和选择性之外,对气体传感器在传感器简易性、室温操作、易于集成和灵活性方面的要求也越来越高。满足这些要求的关键在于开发高性能气体传感材料。继石墨烯之后出现的二维(2D)原子晶体展现出了许多对气体传感有益的吸引人的特性,比如金属硫族化合物(MCs)具有通用且可调的电子/光电子特性、MXenes具有丰富的表面化学性质和良好的导电性,以及黑磷(BP)具有各向异性的结构和电子特性。虽然大多数基于二维原子晶体的气体传感器已被应用于化学电阻器、场效应晶体管(FET)、石英晶体微天平(QCM)或光纤装置中,但其工作原理涉及气体吸附、电荷转移、表面反应、质量负载和/或折射率变化,因材料而异。了解气固相互作用及后续的信号转导途径不仅对于提高现有传感材料的性能至关重要,而且对于寻找新型先进材料也很关键。在这篇综述中,我们旨在从实验和理论研究两方面概述基于各种二维原子晶体的气体传感器的最新进展。我们将特别关注相关传感器的传感机制和工作原理以及提高其传感性能的方法。最后,我们总结全文并为二维材料气体传感器的发展提供未来展望。