Sensing complex gaseous mixtures and identifying their composition and concentration have the potential to achieve unprecedented improvements in environmental monitoring, medical diagnostics, industrial safety, and the food/agriculture industry. Electronically transduced chemical sensors capable of recognizing and differentiating specific target gases and transducing these chemical stimuli in a portable electronic device offer an opportunity for impact by bridging the utility of chemical information with global wireless connectivity. Among electronically transduced chemical sensors, chemiresistors stand out as particularly promising due to combined features of low-power requirements, room temperature operation, non-line-of-sight detection, high portability, and exceptional modularity. Relying on changes in resistance of a functional material triggered by variations in the surrounding chemical environment, these devices have achieved part-per-billion sensitivities of analytes by employing conductive polymers, graphene, carbon nanotubes (CNTs), metal oxides, metal nanoparticles, metal dichalcogenides, or MXenes as sensing materials. Despite these tremendous developments, the need for stable, selective, and sensitive chemiresistors demands continued innovation in material design in order to operate in complex mixtures with interferents as well as variations in humidity and temperature. To fill existing gaps in sensing capabilities, conductive metal−organic frameworks (MOFs) and covalent organic frameworks (COFs) have recently emerged as a promising class of materials for chemiresistive sensing. In contrast to previously reported chemiresistors, these materials offer at least three unique features for gas sensing applications: (i) bottom-up synthesis from molecularly precise precursors that allows for strategic control of material−analyte interactions, (ii) intrinsic conductivity that simultaneously facilitates charge transport and signal transduction under low power requirements, and (iii) high surface area that enables the accessibility of abundant active sites and decontamination of gas streams by coordinating to and, sometimes, detoxifying harmful analytes. Through an emphasis on molecular engineering of structure−property relationships in conductive MOFs and COFs, combined with strategic innovations in device integration strategies and device form factor (i.e., the physical dimensions and design of device components), our group has paved the way to demonstrating the multifunctional utility of these materials in the chemiresistive detection of gases and vapors. Backed by spectroscopic assessment of material−analyte interactions, we illustrated how molecular-level features lead to device performance in detection, filtration, and detoxification of gaseous analytes. By merging the bottom-up synthesis of these materials with device integration, we show the versatility and scalability of using these materials in low-power electronic sensing devices. Taken together, our achievements, combined with the progress spearheaded on this class of materials by other researchers, establish conductive MOFs and COFs as promising multifunctional materials for applications in electronically transduced, portable, low-power sensing devices.
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This content will become publicly available on March 4, 2026
Electronic Chemical Sensors Based on Conductive Framework Materials
The development of portable electronic chemical sensors is key to solving a number of challenges, including monitoring environmental and industrial hazards, as well as understanding and improving human health. Framework materials possess several desirable characteristics that make them well-suited for electroanalytical applications, including high surface area, atomically precise distribution of active sites, and tunable properties that can be leveraged through modular reticular chemistry. This review highlights the emergence of conductive framework materials as active components in electrically transduced chemical sensors, including the development of new materials for the detection of a wide variety of analytes in both gas and liquid phase. The efforts to gain fundamental understanding of the molecular interactions and sensing mechanisms between framework materials and analytes are described, along with applications of these materials on portable and flexible substrates. The review suggests areas for further study, including the study of material−analyte interactions at the molecular level and the continued development of scalable methods for the integration of framework materials into low-power, portable sensing devices.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1945218
- PAR ID:
- 10614545
- Publisher / Repository:
- Analytical Chemistry
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Analytical Chemistry
- Volume:
- 97
- Issue:
- 8
- ISSN:
- 0003-2700
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- 4253 to 4274
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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