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      Recent advances in 2D/nanostructured metal sulfide-based gas sensors: mechanisms, applications, and perspectives

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          Abstract

          This review provides perspectives on metal sulfide-based gas sensors, including the crystal structure, gas sensing mechanisms, applications, and strengths–weaknesses–opportunities–threats (SWOT) analysis.

          Abstract

          2D and nanostructured metal sulfide materials are promising in the advancement of several gas sensing applications due to the abundant choice of materials with easily tunable electronic, optical, physical, and chemical properties. These applications are particularly attractive for gas sensing in environmental monitoring and breath analysis. This review gives a systematic description of various gas sensors based on 2D and nanostructured metal sulfide materials. Firstly, the crystal structures of metal sulfides are introduced. Secondly, the gas sensing mechanisms of different metal sulfides based on density functional theory analysis are summarised. Various gas-sensing concepts of metal sulfide-based devices, including chemiresistors, functionalized metal sulfides, Schottky junctions, heterojunctions, field-effect transistors, and optical and surface acoustic wave sensors, are compared and presented. It then discusses the extensive applications of metal sulfide-based sensors for different gas molecules, including volatile organic compounds ( i.e., acetone, benzene, methane, formaldehyde, ethanol, and liquefied petroleum gas) and inorganic gas ( i.e., CO 2, O 2, NH 3, H 2S, SO 2, NO x, CH 4, H 2, and humidity). Finally, a strengths–weaknesses–opportunities–threats (SWOT) analysis is proposed for future development and commercialization in this field.

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          Emerging photoluminescence in monolayer MoS2.

          Novel physical phenomena can emerge in low-dimensional nanomaterials. Bulk MoS(2), a prototypical metal dichalcogenide, is an indirect bandgap semiconductor with negligible photoluminescence. When the MoS(2) crystal is thinned to monolayer, however, a strong photoluminescence emerges, indicating an indirect to direct bandgap transition in this d-electron system. This observation shows that quantum confinement in layered d-electron materials like MoS(2) provides new opportunities for engineering the electronic structure of matter at the nanoscale.
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            2D transition metal dichalcogenides

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              Detection of individual gas molecules adsorbed on graphene

              The ultimate aim of any detection method is to achieve such a level of sensitivity that individual quanta of a measured entity can be resolved. In the case of chemical sensors, the quantum is one atom or molecule. Such resolution has so far been beyond the reach of any detection technique, including solid-state gas sensors hailed for their exceptional sensitivity. The fundamental reason limiting the resolution of such sensors is fluctuations due to thermal motion of charges and defects, which lead to intrinsic noise exceeding the sought-after signal from individual molecules, usually by many orders of magnitude. Here, we show that micrometre-size sensors made from graphene are capable of detecting individual events when a gas molecule attaches to or detaches from graphene's surface. The adsorbed molecules change the local carrier concentration in graphene one by one electron, which leads to step-like changes in resistance. The achieved sensitivity is due to the fact that graphene is an exceptionally low-noise material electronically, which makes it a promising candidate not only for chemical detectors but also for other applications where local probes sensitive to external charge, magnetic field or mechanical strain are required.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                JMCAET
                Journal of Materials Chemistry A
                J. Mater. Chem. A
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2050-7488
                2050-7496
                December 15 2020
                2020
                : 8
                : 47
                : 24943-24976
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Microelectronics
                [2 ]Faculty of Electrical Engineering, Mathematics & Computer Science
                [3 ]Delft University of Technology
                [4 ]Delft 2628 CT
                [5 ]The Netherlands
                [6 ]School of Microelectronics
                [7 ]Southern University of Science and Technology
                [8 ]Shenzhen 518055
                [9 ]China
                [10 ]Shenzhen Institute of Wide-Bandgap Semiconductors
                [11 ]Department of Mechanical Engineering
                [12 ]Lamar University
                [13 ]USA
                Article
                10.1039/D0TA08190F
                d4938529-8609-4b8e-98c0-a356b99c99d6
                © 2020

                http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/

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