Abstract Paper-based electrochemical sensors provide the opportunity for low-cost, portable and environmentally friendly single-use chemical analysis and there are various reports of surface-functionalized paper electrodes. Here we report a composite paper electrode that is fabricated through designed papermaking using cellulose, carbon fibers (CF), and graphene oxide (GO). The composite paper has well-controlled structure, stable, and repeatable properties, and offers the electrocatalytic activities for sensitive and selective chemical detection. We demonstrate that this CF/GO/cellulose composite paper can be reduced electrochemically using relatively mild conditions and this GO reduction confers electrocatalytic properties to the composite paper. Finally, we demonstrate that this composite paper offers sensing performance (sensitivity and selectivity) comparable to, or better than, paper-based sensors prepared by small-batch surface-modification (e.g., printing) methods. We envision this coupling of industrialized papermaking technologies with interfacial engineering and electrochemical reduction can provide a platform for single-use and portable chemical detection for a wide range of applications.
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An FPGA-Enabled Framework for Rapid Automated Design of Photonic Integrated Circuits
The acknowledgement to NSF supports was missing from this paper. Authors apologize for this error when submitting the camera-ready paper.
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- PAR ID:
- 10511687
- Publisher / Repository:
- ACM
- Date Published:
- ISBN:
- 9798400704185
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 119 to 129
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Location:
- Monterey CA USA
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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