posted on 2020-12-09, 07:33authored byNehru Devabharathi, Arun M. Umarji, Subho Dasgupta
Printed
sensors are among the most successful groups of devices
within the domain of printed electronics, both in terms of their application
versatility and the emerging market share. However, reports on fully
printed gas sensors are rare in the literature, even though it can
be an important development toward fully printed multisensor platforms
for diagnostics, process control, and environmental safety-related
applications. In this regard, here, we present the traditional tin
oxide-based completely inkjet-printed co-continuous and mesoporous
thin films with an extremely large surface-to-volume ratio and then
investigate their NO2 sensing properties at low temperatures.
A method known as evaporation-induced self-assembly (EISA) has been
mimicked in this study using pluronic F127 (PEO106-PPO70-PEO106) as the soft templating agent and xylene
as the micelle expander to obtain highly reproducible and spatially
homogeneous co-continuous mesoporous crystalline SnO2 with
an average pore diameter of the order of 15–20 nm. The fully
printed SnO2 gas sensors thus produced show high linearity
for NO2 detection, along with extremely high average response
of 11,507 at 5 ppm NO2. On the other hand, the sensors
show an ultralow detection limit of the order of 20 ppb with an easy
to amplify response of 31. While the excellent electronic transport
properties along such co-continuous, mesoporous structures are ensured
by their well-connected (co-continuous) ligaments and pores (thereby
ensuring high surface area and high mobility transport at the same
time) and may actually be responsible for the outstanding sensor performance
that has been observed, the use of an industrial printing technique
ascertains the possibility of high-throughput manufacturing of such
sensor units toward inexpensive and wide-range applications.