Abstract

The long-running Covid-19 pandemic has forced researchers across the globe to develop novel sensors and sensor materials for detecting minute quantities of biogenic viruses with high accuracy in a short period. In this context, MXene galleries comprising carbon/nitride two-dimensional nanolayered materials have emerged as excellent host materials in chemical gas sensors owing to their multiple advantages, including high surface area, high electrical conductivity, good thermal/chemical conductivity and chemical stability, composition diversity, and layer-spacing tunability; furthermore, they are popular in clinical, medical, food production, and chemical industries. This review summarizes recent advances in the synthesis, structure, and gas-sensing properties of MXene materials. Current opportunities and future challenges for obtaining MXene-based chemical gas sensors with high sensitivity, selectivity, response/recovery time, and chemical durability are addressed. This review provides a rational and in-depth understanding of the relationship between the gas-sensing properties of MXenes and structure/components, which will promote the further development of two-dimensional MXene-based gas sensors for technical device fabrication and industrial processing applications.

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