TY - JOUR
T1 - Stretchable, Stable, and Room-Temperature Gas Sensors Based on Self-Healing and Transparent Organohydrogels
AU - Wu, Jin
AU - Wu, Zixuan
AU - Huang, Wenxi
AU - Yang, Xing
AU - Liang, Yuning
AU - Tao, Kai
AU - Yang, Bo Ru
AU - Shi, Wenxiong
AU - Xie, Xi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/11/18
Y1 - 2020/11/18
N2 - Conductive hydrogels have emerged as promising candidate materials for fabricating wearable electronics because of their fascinating stimuli-responsive and mechanical properties. However, the inherent instability of hydrogels seriously limits their application scope. Herein, the stable, ultrastretchable (upon to 1330% strain), self-healing, and transparent organohydrogel was exploited as a novel gas-responsive material to fabricate NH3 and NO2 gas sensors for the first time with extraordinary performance. A facile solvent substitution method was employed to convert the unstable hydrogel into the organohydrogel with a remarkable moisture retention (avoid drying within a year), frost resistance (freezing point below -130 °C), and unimpaired mechanical and gas sensing properties. First-principles simulations were performed to uncover the mechanisms of antidrying and antifreezing effects of organohydrogels and the interactions between NH3/NO2 and organohydrogels, revealing the vital role of hydrogen bonds in enhancing the stability and the adsorption of NH3/NO2 on the organohydrogel. The organohydrogel gas sensor displayed high sensitivity, ultralow theoretical limit of detection (91.6 and 3.5 ppb for NH3 and NO2, respectively), reversibility, and fast recovery at room temperature. It exhibited the capabilities to work at a highly deformed state with nondegraded sensing performance and restore all the electrical, mechanical, and sensing properties after mechanical damage. The gas sensing mechanism was understood by considering the gas adsorption on functional groups, dissolution in the solvent, and the hindering effect on the transport of ions.
AB - Conductive hydrogels have emerged as promising candidate materials for fabricating wearable electronics because of their fascinating stimuli-responsive and mechanical properties. However, the inherent instability of hydrogels seriously limits their application scope. Herein, the stable, ultrastretchable (upon to 1330% strain), self-healing, and transparent organohydrogel was exploited as a novel gas-responsive material to fabricate NH3 and NO2 gas sensors for the first time with extraordinary performance. A facile solvent substitution method was employed to convert the unstable hydrogel into the organohydrogel with a remarkable moisture retention (avoid drying within a year), frost resistance (freezing point below -130 °C), and unimpaired mechanical and gas sensing properties. First-principles simulations were performed to uncover the mechanisms of antidrying and antifreezing effects of organohydrogels and the interactions between NH3/NO2 and organohydrogels, revealing the vital role of hydrogen bonds in enhancing the stability and the adsorption of NH3/NO2 on the organohydrogel. The organohydrogel gas sensor displayed high sensitivity, ultralow theoretical limit of detection (91.6 and 3.5 ppb for NH3 and NO2, respectively), reversibility, and fast recovery at room temperature. It exhibited the capabilities to work at a highly deformed state with nondegraded sensing performance and restore all the electrical, mechanical, and sensing properties after mechanical damage. The gas sensing mechanism was understood by considering the gas adsorption on functional groups, dissolution in the solvent, and the hindering effect on the transport of ions.
KW - ammonia sensing
KW - first-principles study
KW - NOsensing
KW - organohydrogel
KW - self-healing
KW - stretchable gas sensor
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096456631&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsami.0c17669
DO - 10.1021/acsami.0c17669
M3 - 文章
C2 - 33147020
AN - SCOPUS:85096456631
SN - 1944-8244
VL - 12
SP - 52070
EP - 52081
JO - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
JF - ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
IS - 46
ER -