Facile integration of single crystalline phthalocyanine nanowires and nanotrees as photoenhanced conductometric sensors

Abstract

This article presents a reproducible and affordable methodology for fabricating organic nanowires (ONWs) and nanotrees (ONTs) light-enhanced conductometric O2 sensors. The protocol is based on a solventless procedure for the formation of high-density arrays of nanowires and nanotrees on interdigitated electrodes. The synthesis combines physical vapour deposition for the self-assembled growth of free-phthalocyanine nanowires and soft plasma etching to prompt the nucleation sites on the as-grown OWNs to allow for the formation of nanotrees. Electrical conductivity in such low-dimensional electrodes is analysed in the context of density, length, and interconnection between nanowires and nanotrees. Further, the electrodes are immersed in water to improve the nanowires' connectivity. The response of the nanotrees as conductometric O2 sensors is tested under different temperatures (from room temperature to 100 ºC), demonstrating that the higher surface area exposed by the nanotrees in comparison with polycrystalline thin film counterparts, effectively enhances the doping effect of oxygen and increases the response of the ONTs-based sensor. Both organic nanowires and nanotrees were applied as model systems to study the enhanced response of the sensors provided by illumination with white or monochromatic light to the organic semiconducting systems. Interestingly, the otherwise negligible sensor response at room temperature can be activated (On/Off) under LED illumination, and no dependency on the illumination wavelength for the visible range was observed. Thus, under low-power LED illumination with white light, we show a response to O2 of 16 % and 37 % in resistivity for organic nanotrees at room temperature and 100ºC, respectively. These results open the path to developing room temperature long-lasting gas sensors based on one and three-dimensional single-crystalline small-molecule nanowires.

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
13 Nov 2024
Accepted
26 Feb 2025
First published
27 Feb 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Nanoscale, 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Facile integration of single crystalline phthalocyanine nanowires and nanotrees as photoenhanced conductometric sensors

A. N. Filippin, Á. Campos, J. Delgado-Alvarez, G. Moreno-Martinez, J. Castillo-Seoane, V. J. Rico, V. Godinho, A. Barranco, J. R. R. Sanchez-Valencia and A. Borras, Nanoscale, 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D4NR04761C

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