4.6 Article

Enhancement in room temperature ammonia sensing properties of naphthalene diimides through core expansion

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY C
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages 1326-1333

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1tc05362k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA) as part of ARENA's Research and Development Program-Renewable Hydrogen for Export [2018/RND012]
  2. NCRIS
  3. Swinburne University Postgraduate Research Award (SUPRA)
  4. Australian Government Research Training Program Scheme

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The study demonstrated that an amperometric sensor using a tetra core-substituted organic semiconductor as the active layer has high sensitivity, selectivity, quick response, low limit of detection, excellent recyclability, and stability. The incorporation of strong electron-withdrawing groups led to increased charge transfer efficiency in the sensor.
An amperometric type sensor whose active layer is derived from a tetra core-substituted organic semiconductor, naphthalene diimide (NDI-CN4), has been evaluated for ammonia gas (3, 6, 25 and 50 ppm) sensing at room temperature against the parent NDI devoid of core-substitution effects. In empirical terms, the tetracyano derived sensor showed high sensitivity (178% at 50 ppm NH3) and selectivity, quick response and recovery (12.5 s/39 s), low limit of detection (3 ppm), and importantly, excellent recyclability and stability. Density functional theory and cyclic voltammetry studies indicate that the incorporation of strong electron-withdrawing groups, i.e. cyano groups, causes a substantial decrease in the reduction potential of the NDI-CN4 leading to a significant rise in the current of the sensor, mainly due to an efficient charge-transfer between NDI-CN4 and ammonia. Furthermore, because of the low-lying LUMO energy level, the NDI-CN4-based sensor shows high stability even with prolonged exposure to ambient air. A comparison with the corresponding core-unsubstituted NDI derivative confirms the positive cooperative effect of core-cyanation on gas sensing performance. It is anticipated that this work could give some useful information for preparing high performance organic sensing devices.

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