A study of smart hydrogels as sensing elements in gaseous environment for VOC detection

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

Abstract

Early-stage disease detection by volatile organic compounds (VOCs) monitoring in breath is a rapidly emerging field of research. Development of corresponding sensors requires highly sensitive and selective sensing elements that can ideally be adjusted for specific target VOCs or biomarker footprints. Smart hydrogels are very interesting candidates for sensing elements, specifically in the biomedical context, as they exhibit a reversible swelling change in response to external stimuli. Moreover, they can easily be tailored for biocompatibility, selectivity and specificity to target analytes. Hence, they could be very promising for VOC detection. However, their applications are so far limited to liquid environments as the swelling response is based on the uptake and release of liquid. The performance in gaseous environments has not been investigated in depth so far. Here, we therefore present a first study of different synthetic acrylamide-based smart hydrogels for use in ambient air with varying relative humidity and investigate their potential for VOC detection with the test analytes acetone and isopropanol. We find that the studied hydrogels (i) maintain their swelling response even in low humidity and present a measurable weight change, (ii) exhibit a distinct response for acetone and isopropanol, and that (iii) PNIPAAm-based hydrogels show the largest response for both analytes and allow a discrimination between them. Conclusively, we demonstrate the feasibility of smart hydrogels as sensing elements for VOCs detection in gaseous environments.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number126009
JournalPolymer
Volume278
Publication statusPublished - 13 Jun 2023
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

ORCID /0000-0002-7062-9598/work/174430556

Keywords

Keywords

  • Acetone, Gas sensor, Gaseous environment, Isopropanol, Relative humidity, Sensing element, Smart hydrogel, Volatile organic compounds