Issue 13, 2024

A surface passivated fluorinated polymer nanocomposite for carbon monoxide resistant plasmonic hydrogen sensing

Abstract

Plasmonic hydrogen sensors are promising safety monitoring devices for the emerging hydrogen economy provided a fast response time and poisoning resistance can be achieved. Nanocomposites composed of palladium nanoparticles embedded in a polymer matrix facilitate rapid hydrogen diffusion if a fluorinated polymer is used, while a denser polymer such as atactic poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) facilitates a high degree of gas selectivity. However, nanocomposites that combine a fast response with poisoning resistance have not yet been realized. Here, these two properties are achieved simultaneously by modifying the surface of a fluorinated polymer nanocomposite with a thin PMMA coating, which functions as a molecular sieve that effectively blocks carbon monoxide. The resulting surface passivated nanocomposite shows a high degree of poisoning resistance without compromising a fast sensing response of 2–3 seconds upon exposure to 100 mbar of hydrogen. The sensor signal and response are preserved over 55 cycles of synthetic air containing 5% hydrogen and 500 ppm of carbon monoxide, indicating that nanocomposites are a viable approach for the realization of robust hydrogen sensors.

Graphical abstract: A surface passivated fluorinated polymer nanocomposite for carbon monoxide resistant plasmonic hydrogen sensing

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Jan 2024
Accepted
19 Feb 2024
First published
29 Feb 2024
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

J. Mater. Chem. A, 2024,12, 7906-7915

A surface passivated fluorinated polymer nanocomposite for carbon monoxide resistant plasmonic hydrogen sensing

I. Östergren, I. Darmadi, S. Lerch, R. R. da Silva, M. Craighero, S. H. K. Paleti, K. Moth-Poulsen, C. Langhammer and C. Müller, J. Mater. Chem. A, 2024, 12, 7906 DOI: 10.1039/D4TA00055B

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