4.8 Article

Stable and Selective Humidity Sensing Using Stacked Black Phosphorus Flakes

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 9, Issue 10, Pages 9898-9905

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b03325

Keywords

two-dimensional (2D) materials; black phosphorus; phosphorene; humidity sensing; liquid-phase exfoliation

Funding

  1. University of Illinois at Chicago
  2. MRSEC Materials Preparation and Measurement Laboratory at the University of Chicago [NSF-DMR-1420709]

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Black phosphorus (BP) atomic layers are known to undergo chemical degradation in humid air. Yet in more robust configurations such as films, composites, and embedded structures, BP can potentially be utilized in a large number of practical applications. In this study, we explored the sensing characteristics of BP films and observed an ultrasensitive and selective response toward humid air with a trace-level detection capability and a very minor drift over time. Our experiments show that the drain current of the BP sensor increases by similar to 4 orders of magnitude as the relative humidity (RH) varies from 10% to 85%, which ranks it among the highest ever reported values for humidity detection. The mechanistic studies indicate that the operation principle of the BP film sensors is based on the modulation in the leakage ionic current caused by autoionization of water molecules and ionic solvation of the phosphorus oxoacids produced on moist BP surfaces. Our stability tests reveal that the response of the BP film sensors remains nearly unchanged after prolonged exposures (up to 3 months) to ambient conditions. This study opens up the route for utilizing BP stacked films in many potential applications such as energy generation/storage systems, electrocatalysis, and chemical/biosensing.

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