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April 8, 2025

Flexible ammonia sensor detects gas with ultra-sensitivity and low cost

The world's first highly flexible and ultra-sensitive ammonia sensor based on a low-temperature synthesized copper bromide (CuBr) film, developed by the KIMS research team. Credit: Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS)
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The world's first highly flexible and ultra-sensitive ammonia sensor based on a low-temperature synthesized copper bromide (CuBr) film, developed by the KIMS research team. Credit: Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS)

A research team has successfully developed the world's first ammonia (NH3) gas sensor based on a copper bromide (CuBr) film that can be fabricated through a simple solution process at low temperatures. The findings are online in Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical.

This not only enables sensor flexibility, ultra-sensitivity, and high selectivity but also significantly reduces manufacturing costs.

Ammonia gas sensors detect airborne and are utilized in indoor and outdoor environmental monitoring, hazardous gas detection in industrial settings, and disease diagnosis. The copper bromide (CuBr) film used in the sensor exhibits a significant change in upon exposure to ammonia, enabling the detection of even low concentrations of the gas.

In conventional methods, forming the copper bromide (CuBr) film required for the sensor necessitates a high-temperature vacuum process above 500°C. This poses challenges in applying it to flexible substrates, which are vulnerable to heat, and also leads to high production costs.

To address this issue, the research team led by Dr. Jongwon Yoon, Dr. Jeongdae Kwon, and Dr. Yonghoon Kim from the Energy & Environmental Materials Research Division at the Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS), developed a technique to form a two-dimensional copper nanosheet on a substrate at a temperature below 150°C without a vacuum process.

Schematic illustration of the copper bromide (CuBr) film synthesis process. A two-dimensional copper nanosheet is formed on the substrate, followed by a solution-based process to synthesize the copper bromide film. Credit: Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS)
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Schematic illustration of the copper bromide (CuBr) film synthesis process. A two-dimensional copper nanosheet is formed on the substrate, followed by a solution-based process to synthesize the copper bromide film. Credit: Korea Institute of Materials Science (KIMS)

They then synthesized the bromide film through a simple solution-based process. As a result, they successfully implemented an ammonia on a plastic substrate.

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This study successfully developed a highly sensitive sensor capable of detecting ammonia concentrations as low as one part per million (ppm) using a low-temperature solution-based process. This breakthrough significantly reduces manufacturing costs and offers potential applications in wearable sensors and diagnostic medical devices.

Furthermore, involving over 1,000 repeated bending cycles confirmed that the sensor maintained high performance and operated with stable functionality.

Dr. Jongwon Yoon, the lead researcher, stated, "The ammonia sensor developed through this study has great potential for expansion into flexible and wearable devices. It can be utilized in a wide range of applications, from monitoring to personal health management."

"In particular, we expect that it could be applied as a disease diagnosis sensor by attaching it to the human body to analyze exhaled breath."

More information: Juyoung Jin et al, Low-temperature solution-processed flexible NH3 gas sensors based on porous CuBr films derived from 2D Cu nanosheets, Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical (2025).

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A new ammonia (NH3) gas sensor using a copper bromide (CuBr) film has been developed, offering ultra-sensitivity, high selectivity, and reduced manufacturing costs. The sensor, created via a low-temperature solution process, detects ammonia concentrations as low as one part per million (ppm) and maintains performance after extensive bending. This innovation holds potential for applications in wearable sensors and medical diagnostics.

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