Human Lung-Like Sensor Monitoring Nitrogen Dioxide, the Major Contributor to Fine Dust, in Real-Time!

- A research team led by Professor Hyuk-jun Kwon, a DGIST Professor, successfully developed a graphene-metal organic framework hybrid structure with hierarchical porosity - A technology capable of detecting extremely low concentrations of nitrogen dioxide at the level of one billionth in real-time... Expected to be applied to next-generation healthcare devices

□ A research team (first author: Hyeong-tae Lim, a student in a combined Master’s and Ph.D. program) led by Professor Hyuk-jun Kwon at the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science of the Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology (DGIST) (president Young Kuk) announced on June 13 (Tue) that a human lung-inspired graphene-metal organic framework hybrid gas sensor that can monitor extremely low concentrations of nitrogen dioxide at the level of one billionth in real-time had been successfully developed. As a high-performance sensor, it is expected to be applied to healthcare devices owing to its simple manufacturing process, good energy efficiency, and flexibility.

 

□ Nitrogen dioxide, one of the major contributors to fine dust, is a hazardous substance that can potentially cause cardiovascular diseases and degenerative brain diseases. To keep nitrogen dioxide under control, it is crucial to develop a sensor that can monitor its concentrations. The performance of a nitrogen dioxide sensor is determined by how low its detection limit is and how quickly the sensor can detect the compound’s concentration.

 

□ Traditional monitoring for nitrogen dioxide is mainly conducted in chemiluminescent stations, which are large in volume, expensive, and limited in terms of spatial measurement coverage. Therefore, the stations cannot provide personalized air pollution information. While semiconductor sensors could be an alternative, the commercialization of these sensors is limited as they not only fail to meet detection limit standards but also require high operating temperatures.

 

□ To overcome these limitations, a research team led by Professor Kwon successfully fabricated a hybrid structure that selectively grows a metal-organic framework (MOF) with extremely high nano-porosity on the substructure of laser-induced graphene (LIG), capable of covering a surface area as large as a soccer field with only 1g, and developed a sensor that can monitor extremely low concentrations of nitrogen dioxide in real-time. More importantly, the sensor developed by Professor Kwon’s research team has a hierarchical pore structure, which is inspired by the human lung. The structure has its advantages not only in its great surface area but also in its fast gas exchanges. Consequently, the research team successfully achieved the lowest detection limit (0.168 ppb) and the fastest response time (15 sec) compared to conventional nitrogen dioxide sensors.

 

□ Moreover, as the hybrid sensor, developed in this study, was based on the laser process, the research team easily manufactured electrodes without complex infrastructure, such as vacuum equipment, and simultaneously, solved the difficulty of patterning the MOF, which was not available previously. In addition, the gas sensor’s flexible structure, which can maintain its performance even if bent up to 10,000 times, is expected to be applied to wearable high-performance healthcare devices.

 

□ “We got inspiration from the human lung and developed a sensor that can protect people from air pollution caused by rapid urbanization in recent years. We hope that the sensor can be applied to wearable devices in the future to provide personalized healthcare information,” said Professor Kwon at the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, DGIST.

 

□ This study was published online on May 30 2023 in Nature Communications, one of the world’s most renowned journals, with Hyeong-tae Lim (a student in a combined Master’s and Ph.D. program) as the first author and Professor Kwon as the corresponding author. In addition, this study was funded by the Ministry of Science and ICT’s Human Plus Convergence Research and Development Project. the National Critical Materials Research Group, and the Convergence Research Center for Olfaction under the Ministry of Education’s University-Centered Research Center Support Project.

 

Correspondence Author Email Address : [email protected]

Published: 04 Jul 2023

Contact details:

DGIST PR

333, Techno jungang-daero, Hyeonpung-myeon, Dalseong-gun, Daegu, 42988

+82-53-785-1135
Country: 
News topics: 
Academic discipline: 
Content type: 
Website: