Abstract

Titanium (IV) dioxide (TiO 2) 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 TiO 2 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 TiO 2-NP/CB composites varied with the identity of the capping ligand. Hence, an array of TiO 2-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.

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