4.6 Article

Self-powered liquid chemical sensors based on solid-liquid contact electrification

Journal

ANALYST
Volume 146, Issue 5, Pages 1656-1662

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0an02126a

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DMR-1709025]
  2. China Scholarship Council

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A self-powered triboelectric sensor based on liquid-solid electrification was developed for liquid chemical sensing, showing distinct sensitivity to different amino acids and versatile sensing ability for various inorganic and organic chemical compounds dissolved in DI water. This work demonstrates a promising sensing application based on the triboelectrification principle for biofluid sensor development.
Triboelectric nanogenerators (TENGs) have attracted many research endeavors as self-powered sensors for force, velocity, and gas detection based on solid-solid or solid-air interactions. Recently, triboelectrification at liquid-solid interfaces also showed intriguing capability in converting physical contacts into electricity. Here, we report a self-powered triboelectric sensor for liquid chemical sensing based on liquid-solid electrification. As a liquid droplet passed across the tribo-negative sensor surface, the induced surface charge balanced with the electrical double layer charge in the liquid droplet. The competition between the double layer charge and surface charge generated characteristic positive and negative voltage spikes, which may serve as a binary feature to identify the chemical compound. The sensor showed distinct sensitivity to three amino acids including glycine, lysine and phenylalanine as a function of their concentration. The versatile sensing ability was further demonstrated on several other inorganic and organic chemical compounds dissolved in DI water. This work demonstrated a promising sensing application based on the triboelectrification principle for biofluid sensor development.

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