| Literature DB >> 28578418 |
Zhuo Chen1, Yao Wang2, Ying Shang1, Ahmad Umar3, Peng Xie1, Qi Qi4, Guofu Zhou5.
Abstract
A facile one-step supramolecular assembly method is adopted to modify reduced graphene oxide (rGO) with functional organic molecule pyranine for achieving comprehensive humidity sensing performance. The fabricated humidity sensor based on pyranine modified-reduced graphene oxide (Pyr-rGO) exhibits excellent sensing performance with ultrafast (<2 s) and ultrahigh response of IL/IH = 6000 as relative humidity (RH) consecutively changes between 11% and 95%; small hysteresis of 8% RH; reliable repeatability and stability. In addition, a detailed mechanism analysis is performed to investigate the difference in water adsorption and ions transfer under various RH levels. Notably, the one-step supramolecular assembly method to prepare Pyr-rGO provides a new insight into developing novel functional humidity sensing materials with enhanced device performance.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28578418 PMCID: PMC5457436 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-02983-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) The schematic of the aggregation by stacked rGO sheets and the supramolecular assembly of Pyr-rGO sheets with corresponding physical images in dispersion. (b) Low- and (c) high-magnification TEM image of the ultrathin Pyr-rGO film.
Figure 2Typical (a) FTIR spectra of GO, rGO and Pyr-rGO. (b) XPS spectra of the Pyr-rGO and rGO, and (c) Raman spectra of the GO, rGO and Pyr-rGO.
Figure 3(a) The impedance curves of Pyr-rGO based humidity sensors measured at different frequencies under different RH levels. (b) The five-cycle response-recovery curve of Pyr-rGO and (c) rGO based humidity sensors measured at 100 Hz as RH level alternately changes between 11% and 95%. (d) Humidity hysteresis curve of Pyr-rGO based humidity sensors as RH level circularly ranges from 11% to 95% at 100 Hz. (e) The 100 cycle continuous response-recovery test for Pyr-rGO based humidity sensors measured at 100 Hz as RH level alternately changes between 11% and 95%.
Comparison in sensing performance towards various humidity sensors.
| Sensing Materials | Methods | RH Range | Response Time | Sensor Typea | Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GO/SnOx/CF[ | Electrospinning | 30–55% | 8 s | Resistance | 3.35 |
| rGO/PDAA[ | LBL Self-assembly | 11–97% | 108 s | Resistance | 1.6b |
| Graphene Oxide[ | Drop-casting | 15–95% | 10.5 s | Capacitance | 378 |
| MoS2/SnO2
[ | Hydrothermal Method | 0–97% | 5 s | Capacitance | >105 |
| Na-Mesoporous Silica[ | Hydrothermal Method | 11–95% | 47 s | Impedance | >105 |
| CuO/rGO[ | Microwave-assisted Hydrothermal Method | 11–98% | 2 s | Impedance | 22700c |
| WO2.72 Crystals[ | Thermal Evaporation | 11–95% | 6 s | Impedance | 3.77b |
| Pyr-rGO ( | Supramolecular Assembly | 11–95% | <2 s | Impedance | 6000 |
aThree widely adopted humidity sensor types are listed in this table, which records the change of resistance, capacitance and the impedance respectively in humidity testing. bFor the convenience of comparison, the evaluation of response is converted as the ratio of the resistance or impedance in high and low RH level. cThe testing frequency is 10 Hz while the other humidity sensors of impedance type are tested in 100 Hz.
Figure 4(a) The complex impedance spectra of Pyr-rGO based humidity sensors at different RH levels. ImZ: imaginary part; ReZ: real part. (b) The equivalent circuit at (b1) low (b2) middle and (b3) high RH range.
Figure 5Linear fit plot of log Z vs. log f for Pyr-rGO at 11% and 33% RH.
Figure 6(a) The schematic diagram for fabricating humidity sensor by Drop & Dry method and typical optical image of a fabricated humidity sensor. (b) The component and overall dimensions of the humidity sensor.