Issue 42, 2016

Low powered, tunable and ultra-light aerographite sensor for climate relevant gas monitoring

Abstract

Increasing atmospheric CO2 gas pollution and emergence of new types of green energy sources require continuous environmental monitoring. In this context, fast, efficient, light, robust, and reliable gas sensors that can work at room temperature are in high demand. We report on a low-powered type of ultra-light sensor, based on a 3-D-microtube network from a 2-D graphene/nanographite, called aerographite, and a method to tune the nanosensor’s selectivity by a simple variation of the applied bias voltage. Adequate selectivity to CO2 and ultra-fast sensing of H2 by applying 1 V and 5 V, respectively, is obtained. At ultra-low applied bias voltages (1–100 mV) only very low power consumption (≈3.6 nW for 1 mV) is needed. This is most important, as it can be run by energy harvesting methods. The presented results are of the highest interest in terms of low-cost production of ultra-light and ultra-low-power consumption gas sensors for environmental monitoring of greenhouse gases and their simplicity from the technological/engineering points of view.

Graphical abstract: Low powered, tunable and ultra-light aerographite sensor for climate relevant gas monitoring

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Jun 2016
Accepted
25 Sep 2016
First published
27 Sep 2016
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2016,4, 16723-16730

Low powered, tunable and ultra-light aerographite sensor for climate relevant gas monitoring

O. Lupan, V. Postica, M. Mecklenburg, K. Schulte, Y. K. Mishra, B. Fiedler and R. Adelung, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2016, 4, 16723 DOI: 10.1039/C6TA05347E

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