Cr-Doped Pd Metallene Endows a Practical Formaldehyde Sensor New Limit and High Selectivity

Jingxian Zhang, Fan Lv, Zehui Li, Guangya Jiang, Meijuan Tan, Menglei Yuan, Qinghua Zhang, Youpeng Cao, Haoyun Zheng, Lingling Zhang, Cheng Tang, Wangyang Fu, Can Liu, Kaihui Liu, Lin Gu, Jingkun Jiang, Guangjin Zhang, Shaojun Guo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

87 Scopus citations

Abstract

Electrochemical sensors for detecting micromolecule organics are desirable for improving the perception of environmental quality and human health. However, currently, the electrochemical sensors for formaldehyde are substantially limited on the market due to the long-term unsolved problems of the low electrooxidation efficiency and CO poisoning issue of commercial Pd catalysts. Here, a 2D Cr-doped Pd metallene (Cr-Pdene) with few atomic layers is shown as an advanced catalyst for ultrasensitive and selective sensing of formaldehyde via a highly efficient formaldehyde electrooxidation. It is found that the doping of Cr into Pd metallene can efficiently optimize the electronic structure of Pd and weaken the interaction between Pd and CO, providing an anti-poisoning means to favor CO2 production and suppress CO adsorption. The Cr-Pdene-based electrochemical sensor exhibits one order of magnitude higher detection range and, especially, much higher anti-interference for formaldehyde than that of the conventional sensors. Most importantly, it is demonstrated that the Cr-Pdene can be integrated into commercializable wireless sensor networks or handheld instruments for promising applications relating to the environment, health, and food.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2105276
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume34
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 13 Jan 2022
Externally publishedYes

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