Room-temperature selective NO2 sensing using porous TiO2 nanorods via a humidity-mediated conduction

Abstract

The development of room-temperature (RT) NO2 gas sensors with high sensitivity and selectivity is essential for real-time environmental monitoring. Here, we demonstrate an ionic-mediated sensing strategy using highly porous TiO2 nanorods (NRs). The vertically aligned architecture enhances hydroxyl coverage and enables proton hopping pathways under humid conditions, leading to a transition from electronic hopping conduction in dry air to proton-dominated conduction in humid environments. The TiO2 NR sensors achieve ultrafast detection at RT, with response and recovery times of approximately 5 s and 7 s toward 2 ppm NO2. A high response of approximately 670 and a theoretical detection limit of 505 ppt are obtained at 40% relative humidity. Comparable responses at 20% RH under higher bias demonstrate a broadened operational humidity window. The sensors exhibit excellent repeatability with a coefficient of variation of 3.87% and strong selectivity with negligible responses to reducing gases. These results highlight ionic-mediated TiO2 NRs as a practical platform for low-power, NO2 sensing at RT with bias-tunable humidity adaptability.

Graphical abstract: Room-temperature selective NO2 sensing using porous TiO2 nanorods via a humidity-mediated conduction

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Mar 2026
Accepted
19 Apr 2026
First published
24 Apr 2026

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2026, Advance Article

Room-temperature selective NO2 sensing using porous TiO2 nanorods via a humidity-mediated conduction

Y. G. Song, S. Y. Chun, Y. Park, I. Myeong, Y. Shim and C. Kang, J. Mater. Chem. C, 2026, Advance Article , DOI: 10.1039/D6TC00658B

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