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Composites of carboxylate-capped TiO2 nanoparticles and carbon black as chemiresistive vapor sensors
Authors:Edgardo García-BerríosAuthor VitaeTing GaoAuthor Vitae  Don WalkerAuthor VitaeBruce S BrunschwigAuthor Vitae  Nathan S LewisAuthor Vitae
Affiliation:a Beckman Institute and Kavli Nanoscience Institute, 210 Noyes Laboratory, 127-72 Division of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, United States
b Polymer, Ceramics, Technical Services Laboratories, Tyco Electronics Corporation, Technology Group, 306 Constitution Drive, Menlo Park, CA 94025, United States
c Beckman Institute, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125, United States
Abstract:Titanium (IV) dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles (NPs) with a 1-5 nm diameter were synthesized by a sol-gel method, functionalized with carboxylate ligands, and combined with carbon black (CB) to produce chemiresistive chemical vapor sensor films. The TiO2 acted as an inorganic support phase for the swellable, organic capping groups of the NPs, and the CB imparted electrical conductivity to the film. Such sensor composite films exhibited a reproducible, reversible change in relative differential resistance upon exposure to a series of organic test vapors. The response of such chemiresistive composites was comparable to, but generally somewhat smaller than, that of thiol-capped Au NPs. For a given analyte, the resistance response and signal-to-noise ratio of the capped TiO2-NP/CB composites varied with the identity of the capping ligand. Hence, an array of TiO2-NP/CB composites, with each film having a compositionally different carboxylate capping ligand, provided good vapor discrimination and quantification when exposed to a series of organic vapors. Principal components analysis of the relative differential resistance response of the sensor array revealed a clear clustering of the response for each analyte tested. This approach expands the options for composite-based chemiresistive vapor sensing, from use of organic monomeric or polymeric sorbent phases, to use of electrically insulating capped inorganic NPs as the nonconductive phase of chemiresistive composite vapor sensors.
Keywords:Titanium (IV) dioxide nanoparticles  Carbon black composites  Electronic nose  Principal components analysis (PCA)
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