Publication detail

Preserving Fine Structure Details and Dramatically Enhancing Electron Transfer Rates in Graphene 3D-Printed Electrodes via Thermal Annealing: Toward Nitroaromatic Explosives Sensing

NOVOTNÝ, F. URBANOVÁ, V. PLUTNAR, J. PUMERA, M.

Original Title

Preserving Fine Structure Details and Dramatically Enhancing Electron Transfer Rates in Graphene 3D-Printed Electrodes via Thermal Annealing: Toward Nitroaromatic Explosives Sensing

Type

journal article in Web of Science

Language

English

Original Abstract

Additive manufacturing (AM) represents one of the nine pillars of the new industrial revolution. Owing to the enthusiastic utilization of this technology by the wider professional and amateur communities, AM is becoming a driving force in the manufacturing sector due to its fast expansion and the availability of cheap and robust 3D printers. The 3D printing, especially the fused deposition modeling (FDM) method, has previously been utilized to fabricate carbon/polylactic acid (PLA) electrodes for electrochemical setups. Such electrodes require activation from their pristine state for improved conductivity, so far achieved by chemical treatment. Herein, a new simple physical thermal annealing method to activate graphene-based PLA electrodes is presented. The graphene/PLA electrodes are fabricated via FDM 3D printing using a commercial graphene- polymer composite conductive filament and subjected to thermal and chemical activation with a subsequent electrochemical pre-treatment. The thermally annealed electrodes exhibit faster electron transfer than the chemically activated or non-treated electrodes in the inner sphere redox probe ferro/ferricyanide. The thermally activated graphene/PLA electrodes are also successfully employed as a low-cost alternative to nitroaromatic explosive sensors. This chemical-free activation method is a facile, fast, and simple route to activate conductive carbon/PLA 3D prints, which increases the electric conductivity and preserves the fine details of the printed objects, making this activation method relevant to a broad range of applied fields utilizing conductive polymer composites.

Keywords

additive manufacturing; fused deposition modeling; electrochemical sensor; 3D printing; explosives detection

Authors

NOVOTNÝ, F.; URBANOVÁ, V.; PLUTNAR, J.; PUMERA, M.

Released

25. 9. 2019

ISBN

1944-8244

Periodical

ACS APPL MATER INTER

Year of study

11

Number

38

State

United States of America

Pages from

35371

Pages to

35375

Pages count

5

URL

BibTex

@article{BUT160036,
  author="Filip {Novotný} and Veronika {Urbanová} and Jan {Plutnar} and Martin {Pumera}",
  title="Preserving Fine Structure Details and Dramatically Enhancing Electron Transfer Rates in Graphene 3D-Printed Electrodes via Thermal Annealing: Toward Nitroaromatic Explosives Sensing",
  journal="ACS APPL MATER INTER",
  year="2019",
  volume="11",
  number="38",
  pages="35371--35375",
  doi="10.1021/acsami.9b06683",
  issn="1944-8244",
  url="https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsami.9b06683"
}