Carbon Materials Based Sensors and the Application
A special issue of Sensors (ISSN 1424-8220). This special issue belongs to the section "Chemical Sensors".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (25 February 2018) | Viewed by 81486
Special Issue Editors
Interests: Boron Nitride; III-Nitrides; graphene; 2D materials; sensors; CVD; crystal growth; electron devices
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
With the rise of distributed and embedded sensing, driven by real-time systems monitoring, as well as the Internet of Things (IoT), there has arisen a demand for low-cost, low-power sensors for a variety of applications. These include real-time emissions sensors for automotive and industrial applications, UV and radiation detectors for health monitoring, electrochemical sensors for aqueous environments, among others.
Carbon based materials, spurred by the rise of graphene due to the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics, and SiC in the power electronics/optoelectronics realm exemplified by the need for new devices in electric vehicles, are now uniquely poised to extend the market reach of group-IV materials beyond silicon. In particular, the vast range of functionalities ranging from diamond to graphite/graphene, to organic electronics, afforded by carbon are well positioned to transition from basic physics to practical applications.
This Special Issue aims to highlight recent advances in carbon-based sensors, and related enabling techniques and technologies, with particular emphasis on device concepts. Topics include, but are not limited, to:
- Photodetectors
- Gas sensors
- Sensing architectures
- Readout electronics
- Organic electronics
- Nuclear sensors
- Electrochemical Sensors
- Crystal growth techniques
- Device concepts
Prof. Dr. Michael G. Spencer
Dr. MVS Chandrashekhar
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- Graphene
- Diamond
- Polymers
- carbón containing compounds
- sensors
- gas sensing
- filters
- photodetectors
- physical sensors
- readout electronics
- nuclear sensing
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