A highly sensitive and moisture-resistant gas sensor for diabetes diagnosis with Pt@In2O3 nanowires and a molecular sieve for protection

Sensitive and selective detection of acetone in human exhaled breath plays an important role in the diagnosis of diabetes. However, obtaining a reliable response to ppb levels of acetone and avoiding cross-sensitivity due to the large amount of moisture in exhaled breath are still great challenges. In this work, a type of acetone sensor with ultrahigh sensitivity and moisture resistance is reported. Electrospun In2O3 nanowires with a controllable Pt core (Pt@In2O3 core-shell nanowires) are designed and prepared as sensitive layers. A mesoporous silica molecular sieve is further integrated as the moisture filter layer. The Pt@In2O3 core-shell nanowire-based sensor exhibits a highly improved response compared with a sensor based on pure In2O3 nanowires due to the probable increase in surface resistance and the introduction of p–n junctions after rational design of the structure. In addition, a good performance in terms of the fast dynamic process, selectivity and long-term stability is also achieved, and the detection limit can be as low as 10 ppb, which is much lower than the concentration level of 1.8 ppm in the exhaled breath of diabetic patients. The influence of the large amount of moisture is greatly weakened by using the molecular sieve as a moisture filter layer, leading to much improved sensitivity in clinical sample detection among healthy and diabetic patients. Based on the optimized composite structure of the Pt@In2O3 core-shell nanowire sensor and moisture filter layer, a simple portable sensing prototype is successfully fabricated. The reported Pt@In2O3 core-shell nanowires and the acetone sensing approach open up a new opportunity for a simple, inexpensive, and noninvasive diagnosis of diabetes.Nanowires: Spotting diabetes by catching a breathPortable sensors containing metallic nanowires and moisture-absorbing desiccants can spot critical levels of a diabetes biomarker in human breath. Recent studies show that an acetone concentration of 1.8 parts per million in exhaled breath implies high diabetes risk. Lin Xu and co-workers from Jilin University, Changchun, China, report a one-step preparation of acetone-sensitive nanomaterials. By forcing reagents through thin needles, the team produced iridium oxide nanowires with a solid core of pure platinum, a combination that makes the nanowires’ surface unusually sensitive to resistance changes due to foreign particles. At specific operating temperatures, the nanowires swiftly detected acetone absorption at levels as low as 10 parts per billion. A prototype containing the nanowires and a water-trapping film of molecular sieves made it possible to distinguish healthy people from those with diabetes simply by collecting breath samples.In this work, electrospun In2O3 nanowires with controllable Pt core were designed and prepared as an ultra-sensitive layer with good electron transmission ability as well as high surface area, and then SBA-15 molecular sieve was further integrated as a moisture filter layer. The as-design device was successfully used to detect trace acetone biomarker in exhaled breath, which could accurately distinguish the health people from diabetes in clinical samples.

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