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Molecules with multiple personalities: How switchable materials could revolutionise chemical sensing

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posted on 2024-11-15, 02:51 authored by Fernando Benito-Lopez, R Byrne, Yizhen Wu, Lorrain Nolan, Jung Ho KimJung Ho Kim, King Tong Lau, Gordon WallaceGordon Wallace, Dermot Diamond
Worldwide, the demand for sensing devices that can conform with the requirements of large-scale wireless sensor network (WSN) deployments is rising exponentially. Typically, sensors should be very low cost, low power (essentially self-sustaining), yet very rugged and reliable. At present, functioning WSN deployments involve physical transducers only, such as thermistors, accelerometers, photodetectors, flow meters, to monitor quantities like temperature, movement, light level and liquid level/flow. Remote, widely distributed monitoring of molecular targets remains relatively unexplored, except in the case of targets that can be detected directly using 'non-contact' techniques like spectroscopy. This paper will address the issues inhibiting the close integration of chemical sensing with WSNs and suggest strategies based on fundamental materials science that may offer routes to new sensing surfaces that can switch between different modes of behaviour (e.g. active-passive, expand-contract).

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Citation

Benito-Lopez, F., Byrne, R., Wu, Y., Nolan, L., Kim, J., Lau, K. T., Wallace, G. G. & Diamond, D. (2009). Molecules with multiple personalities: How switchable materials could revolutionise chemical sensing. ECS Transactions, 19 (6), 199-210.

Journal title

ECS Transactions

Volume

19

Issue

6

Pagination

199-210

Language

English

RIS ID

32455

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