Detail publikačního výsledku

Surface-Engineered 2D Nanomaterials in Gas Sensors: Advancement and Challenges

BHARDWAJ, R.; PUMERA, M.

Originální název

Surface-Engineered 2D Nanomaterials in Gas Sensors: Advancement and Challenges

Anglický název

Surface-Engineered 2D Nanomaterials in Gas Sensors: Advancement and Challenges

Druh

Článek WoS

Originální abstrakt

2D nanomaterials liketransition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), MXene, nitrides, and black phosphorus-based gas sensors have garnered extensive attention in recentdecades. The extraordinary physicochemical and electrical properties of 2D nanomaterials make them highly sensitive toward gas molecules at roomtemperature. However, despite their potential, the current gas sensingtechnology suffers from inadequate selectivity, inaccurate detection and environmentalinstability. This review provides an overview of recent developments in surface-engineering routes to improve the sensing properties of 2D nanomaterials-based gas sensors. First, it covers emerging 2D nanomaterials, their synthesis routes, and gas-sensing mechanisms. Lateron, thoroughly explores renowned surface-engineering strategies such as defectmodulation, nanoparticle functionalization, and heteroatom doping to enhancethe gas sensing performance. Metal intercalation and partial surface oxidation/reductionapproaches are also discussed to tune the sensing characteristics. Furthermore, single-atom catalyst engineering highlights the anchoring of metalatoms on 2D nanomaterials to achieve enhanced atom utilization, leading tobetter catalytic sensing activities. The engineering techniques introduceeffective surface sensitization, modulated carrier concentration in 2D materials. This review outlines the key objectives of surface-engineeringstrategies to overcome the limitations of hybrid materials and pave the way fornext-generation sensors with enhanced sensing performance toimpact a wide range of applications.

Anglický abstrakt

2D nanomaterials liketransition metal dichalcogenides (TMDs), MXene, nitrides, and black phosphorus-based gas sensors have garnered extensive attention in recentdecades. The extraordinary physicochemical and electrical properties of 2D nanomaterials make them highly sensitive toward gas molecules at roomtemperature. However, despite their potential, the current gas sensingtechnology suffers from inadequate selectivity, inaccurate detection and environmentalinstability. This review provides an overview of recent developments in surface-engineering routes to improve the sensing properties of 2D nanomaterials-based gas sensors. First, it covers emerging 2D nanomaterials, their synthesis routes, and gas-sensing mechanisms. Lateron, thoroughly explores renowned surface-engineering strategies such as defectmodulation, nanoparticle functionalization, and heteroatom doping to enhancethe gas sensing performance. Metal intercalation and partial surface oxidation/reductionapproaches are also discussed to tune the sensing characteristics. Furthermore, single-atom catalyst engineering highlights the anchoring of metalatoms on 2D nanomaterials to achieve enhanced atom utilization, leading tobetter catalytic sensing activities. The engineering techniques introduceeffective surface sensitization, modulated carrier concentration in 2D materials. This review outlines the key objectives of surface-engineeringstrategies to overcome the limitations of hybrid materials and pave the way fornext-generation sensors with enhanced sensing performance toimpact a wide range of applications.

Klíčová slova

2D materials; gas sensing

Klíčová slova v angličtině

2D materials; gas sensing

Autoři

BHARDWAJ, R.; PUMERA, M.

Vydáno

01.08.2025

Nakladatel

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH

Místo

WEINHEIM

ISSN

1613-6829

Periodikum

Small

Svazek

21

Číslo

34

Stát

Spolková republika Německo

Strany počet

30

URL

BibTex

@article{BUT198686,
  author="Radha {Bhardwaj} and Martin {Pumera}",
  title="Surface-Engineered 2D Nanomaterials in Gas Sensors: Advancement and Challenges",
  journal="Small",
  year="2025",
  volume="21",
  number="34",
  pages="30",
  doi="10.1002/smll.202410360",
  issn="1613-6810",
  url="https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/smll.202410360"
}