posted on 2018-11-13, 00:00authored byKyeong Min Cho, Soo-Yeon Cho, Sanggyu Chong, Hyeong-Jun Koh, Dae Woo Kim, Jihan Kim, Hee-Tae Jung
With
growing focus on the use of carbon nanomaterials in chemical sensors,
one-dimensional graphene nanoribbon (GNR) has become one of the most
attractive channel materials, owing to its enhanced conductance fluctuation
by quantum confinement effects and dense, abundant edge sites. Due
to the narrow width of a basal plane with one-dimensional morphology,
chemical modification of edge sites would greatly affect the electrical
channel properties of a GNR. Here, we demonstrate for the first time
that chemically functionalizing the edge sites with aminopropylsilane
(APS) molecules can significantly enhance the sensing performance
of the GNR sensor. The resulting APS-functionalized GNR has a sensitivity
((ΔR/Rb)max) of ∼30% at 0.125 ppm nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and
an ultrafast response time (∼6 s), which are, respectively,
7- and 15-fold enhancements compared to a pristine GNR sensor. This
is the fastest and most sensitive gas-sensing performance of all GNR
sensors reported. To demonstrate the superiority of the GNR-APS sensor,
we compare its sensing performance with that of APS-functionalized
carbon nanotube (CNT) and reduced graphene oxide (rGO) sensors prepared
in identical synthesis conditions. Very interestingly, the GNR-APS
sensor exhibited 30- and 93-fold enhanced sensitivity compared to
the CNT-APS and rGO-APS sensors. This might be attributed to highly
active edge sites with superior chemical reactivity, which are not
present in CNT and rGO materials. Density functional theory clearly
shows that the greatly enhanced gas response of GNR with edge functionalization
can be attributed to the higher electron densities in the highest
occupied molecular orbital levels of GNR-APS and incorporation of
additional adsorption sites. This finding is the first demonstration
of the importance of edge functionalization of GNR for chemical sensors.