4.6 Article

Drawing Sensors with Ball-Milled Blends of Metal-Organic Frameworks and Graphite

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 17, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s17102192

Keywords

gas sensor; chemiresistor; metal-organic framework

Funding

  1. Dartmouth College
  2. Army Research Office Young Investigator Program [W911NF-17-1-0398]

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The synthetically tunable properties and intrinsic porosity of conductive metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) make them promising materials for transducing selective interactions with gaseous analytes in an electrically addressable platform. Consequently, conductive MOFs are valuable functional materials with high potential utility in chemical detection. The implementation of these materials, however, is limited by the available methods for device incorporation due to their poor solubility and moderate electrical conductivity. This manuscript describes a straightforward method for the integration of moderately conductive MOFs into chemiresistive sensors by mechanical abrasion. To improve electrical contacts, blends of MOFs with graphite were generated using a solvent-free ball-milling procedure. While most bulk powders of pure conductive MOFs were difficult to integrate into devices directly via mechanical abrasion, the compressed solid-state MOF/graphite blends were easily abraded onto the surface of paper substrates equipped with gold electrodes to generate functional sensors. This method was used to prepare an array of chemiresistors, from four conductive MOFs, capable of detecting and differentiating NH3, H2S and NO at parts-per-million concentrations.

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