Researchers at the
University
of Manchester have developed a way of using ultra thin layers of carbon to
detect even a single molecule of a toxic gas.
Three years ago, Manchester scientists discovered graphene, a one-atom-thick
gauze of carbon atoms in a hexagonal structure that resembles chicken wire, but
obtaining it was a difficult process.
Recently, a range of possible uses for graphene have been uncovered by
scientists, including research into using it as a
replacement for
silicon in micro-circuitry.
Working with researchers from the
Institute for Microelectronics
Technology in Russia and the Institute for Molecules and Materials at the
University of Nijmegen in the Netherlands, the
same Manchester team has found that graphene is extremely sensitive to the
presence of minute amounts of gases such as alcohol vapour or extremely toxic
carbon monoxide.
The result came as a surprise to researchers who considered graphene to be
completely chemically inert.
The researchers have shown that gas molecules gently attach themselves to
graphene without disrupting its chicken wire structure. The attachment adds or
takes away electrons from the graphene molecules, which results in measurable
changes in its electrical conductance.
"This level of sensitivity is typically millions of times higher than for any
other gas detector demonstrated before. Graphene sensors are as sensitive as
sensors can be in principle," said Dr Kostya Novoselov, from the school of
physics and astronomy.
While this is a significant breakthrough, the team stressed that further
research is needed to make such detectors sensitive to individual gases.
This sensitivity is a problem suffered by all solid-state gas detectors and
is usually solvable using filters and analysis of a temperature response.
"At present you could not sniff out a flammable substance hidden in luggage
because an increase in air humidity would give false readings," added fellow
researcher Professor Andre Geim.
"This is only the first step on the route to commercial graphene-based
sensors, but the road ahead is clear. Once again, graphene has proved itself to
be a material with truly remarkable qualities, allowing observations that no
other known material could do."
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