Bio-inspired hierarchical GO/WS2/PANI heterostructure for high-performance room-temperature NH3 sensing: Enabling real-time wireless health monitoring

  • Jianxin Zhao
  • , Shihong Wang
  • , Leyang Huang
  • , Hao Zhong
  • , Wenqi Lv
  • , Zeyin Mao
  • , Anni Deng
  • , Yixuan Shi
  • , Qin Huang
  • , Rongxin Fu
  • , Guoliang Huang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Exhaled ammonia (NH3) is a key biomarker for kidney and metabolic diseases, and its low-concentration detection at room temperature can facilitate early disease screening and enable remote patient care. However, conventional NH3 sensors are hindered by insufficient sensitivity, poor flexibility, and unsustainable fabrication. Herein, we report a functionally bio-inspired hierarchical strategy by constructing a ternary GO/WS2/PANI heterostructure that translates key functional principles of the human olfactory epithelium—humidity-enabled enrichment, interfacial coupling, and multiscale transport. A flexible and environmentally friendly sensor was fabricated via vacuum filtration and inkjet printing onto cellulose paper. The sensor exhibits a high response of 170 % toward 10 ppm NH3 at room temperature, with response and recovery times of 13 and 26 s, and a detection limit of 81 ppb. Density functional theory calculations reveal that enhanced sensing performance arises from heterojunction-induced charge redistribution and favorable band alignment. Moreover, the device demonstrates excellent selectivity and operational stability. A wireless sensing module was further integrated, enabling real-time detection of exhaled NH3 and emissions from urine and feces. This work presents a novel biomimetic design paradigm for next-generation wearable gas sensors, with broad potential for applications in health monitoring, early disease screening, and telemedicine.

Original languageEnglish
Article number129032
JournalTalanta
Volume298
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2026

Keywords

  • Ammonia sensing
  • Biomimetic design
  • Flexible sensor
  • GO/WS/PANI composite
  • Wearable health monitoring

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