TY - JOUR
T1 - Microsecond-Scale Transient Thermal Sensing Enabled by Flexible Mo1−xWxS2 Alloys
AU - Li, Weiwei
AU - Kong, Lingyan
AU - Xu, Manzhang
AU - Gao, Jiuwei
AU - Luo, Lei
AU - Li, Yingzhe
AU - Wang, Kexin
AU - Zhou, Yilin
AU - Li, Lei
AU - Wei, Yuan
AU - Zhang, Xiaoshan
AU - Zhao, Ruoqing
AU - Chen, Mengdi
AU - Yan, Yuting
AU - Luo, Xiaoguang
AU - Dai, Zhaohe
AU - Zheng, Lu
AU - Wang, Xuewen
AU - Huang, Wei
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Weiwei Li et al.
PY - 2024/1/1
Y1 - 2024/1/1
N2 - Real-time thermal sensing through flexible temperature sensors in extreme environments is critically essential for precisely monitoring chemical reactions, propellant combustions, and metallurgy processes. However, despite their low response speed, most existing thermal sensors and related sensing materials will degrade or even lose their sensing performances at either high or low temperatures. Achieving a microsecond response time over an ultrawide temperature range remains challenging. Here, we design a flexible temperature sensor that employs ultrathin and consecutive Mo1−xWxS2 alloy films constructed via inkjet printing and a thermal annealing strategy. The sensing elements exhibit a broad work range (20 to 823 K on polyimide and 1,073 K on flexible mica) and a record-low response time (about 30 μs). These properties enable the sensors to detect instantaneous temperature variations induced by contact with liquid nitrogen, water droplets, and flames. Furthermore, a thermal sensing array offers the spatial mapping of arbitrary shapes, heat conduction, and cold traces even under bending deformation. This approach paves the way for designing unique sensitive materials and flexible sensors for transient sensing under harsh conditions.
AB - Real-time thermal sensing through flexible temperature sensors in extreme environments is critically essential for precisely monitoring chemical reactions, propellant combustions, and metallurgy processes. However, despite their low response speed, most existing thermal sensors and related sensing materials will degrade or even lose their sensing performances at either high or low temperatures. Achieving a microsecond response time over an ultrawide temperature range remains challenging. Here, we design a flexible temperature sensor that employs ultrathin and consecutive Mo1−xWxS2 alloy films constructed via inkjet printing and a thermal annealing strategy. The sensing elements exhibit a broad work range (20 to 823 K on polyimide and 1,073 K on flexible mica) and a record-low response time (about 30 μs). These properties enable the sensors to detect instantaneous temperature variations induced by contact with liquid nitrogen, water droplets, and flames. Furthermore, a thermal sensing array offers the spatial mapping of arbitrary shapes, heat conduction, and cold traces even under bending deformation. This approach paves the way for designing unique sensitive materials and flexible sensors for transient sensing under harsh conditions.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201883703&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.34133/research.0452
DO - 10.34133/research.0452
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85201883703
SN - 2096-5168
VL - 7
JO - Research
JF - Research
M1 - 0452
ER -