| Literature DB >> 34162881 |
Lixuan Liu1,2, Kun Ye1, Changqing Lin3, Zhiyan Jia4,5, Tianyu Xue6, Anmin Nie7, Yingchun Cheng3, Jianyong Xiang1, Congpu Mu1, Bochong Wang1, Fusheng Wen1, Kun Zhai1, Zhisheng Zhao1, Yongji Gong8, Zhongyuan Liu9, Yongjun Tian1.
Abstract
Emerging two-dimensional (2D) layered materials have been attracting great attention as sensing materials for next-generation high-performance biological and chemical sensors. The sensor performance of 2D materials is strongly dependent on the structural defects as indispensable active sites for analyte adsorption. However, controllable defect engineering in 2D materials is still challenging. In the present work, we propose exploitation of controllably grown polycrystalline films of 2D layered materials with high-density grain boundaries (GBs) for design of ultra-sensitive ion sensors, where abundant structural defects on GBs act as favorable active sites for ion adsorption. As a proof-of-concept, our fabricated surface plasmon resonance sensors with GB-rich polycrystalline monolayer WS2 films have exhibited high selectivity and superior attomolar-level sensitivity in Hg2+ detection owing to high-density GBs. This work provides a promising avenue for design of ultra-sensitive sensors based on GB-rich 2D layered materials.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34162881 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-24254-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919