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Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Advanced Electronic Devices Research Group(AEDRG) - Kwon Lab.
1. Journal Articles
Laser-Induced and MOF-Derived Metal Oxide/Carbon Composite for Synergistically Improved Ethanol Sensing at Room temperature
Lim, Hyeongtae
;
Kwon, Hyuk-Jun
;
Kwon, Hyeokjin
;
Kang, Hongki
;
Jang, Jae Eun
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Advanced Electronic Devices Research Group(AEDRG) - Kwon Lab.
1. Journal Articles
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Advanced Electronic Devices Research Group(AEDRG) - Jang Lab.
1. Journal Articles
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Advanced Electronic Devices Research Group(AEDRG) - Kang Lab.
1. Journal Articles
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Title
Laser-Induced and MOF-Derived Metal Oxide/Carbon Composite for Synergistically Improved Ethanol Sensing at Room temperature
Issued Date
2024-12
Citation
Lim, Hyeongtae. (2024-12). Laser-Induced and MOF-Derived Metal Oxide/Carbon Composite for Synergistically Improved Ethanol Sensing at Room temperature. Nano-Micro Letters, 16(1). doi: 10.1007/s40820-024-01332-5
Type
Article
Author Keywords
Metal-organic frameworks
;
Metal oxide
;
Carbon composite
;
Laser
;
Gas sensor
Keywords
PHOTORESPONSE
;
FRAMEWORK THIN-FILMS
;
ARRAYS
ISSN
2311-6706
Abstract
Advancements in sensor technology have significantly enhanced atmospheric monitoring. Notably, metal oxide and carbon (MOx/C) hybrids have gained attention for their exceptional sensitivity and room-temperature sensing performance. However, previous methods of synthesizing MOx/C composites suffer from problems, including inhomogeneity, aggregation, and challenges in micropatterning. Herein, we introduce a refined method that employs a metal–organic framework (MOF) as a precursor combined with direct laser writing. The inherent structure of MOFs ensures a uniform distribution of metal ions and organic linkers, yielding homogeneous MOx/C structures. The laser processing facilitates precise micropatterning (< 2μm, comparable to typical photolithography) of the MOx/C crystals. The optimized MOF-derived MOx/C sensor rapidly detected ethanol gas even at room temperature (105 and 18s for response and recovery, respectively), with a broad range of sensing performance from 170 to 3,400ppm and a high response value of up to 3,500%. Additionally, this sensor exhibited enhanced stability and thermal resilience compared to previous MOF-based counterparts. This research opens up promising avenues for practical applications in MOF-derived sensing devices. (Figure presented.). © The Author(s) 2024.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/56522
DOI
10.1007/s40820-024-01332-5
Publisher
Springer Nature
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Kwon, Hyuk-Jun
권혁준
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
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