Crosstalk-Resistant Multifunctional Sensor Based on APTES-Treated Polyaniline/rGO Composite for the Independent Detection of Swelling, Temperature, and CO2open access
- Authors
- Yu, Hyeon-Wook; Kim, Tae-Hee; Jeon, Jun-Yeong; Lee, Seung-Woo; Lee, Ju-Seong; Kim, Hyun-Seok
- Issue Date
- 2026
- Publisher
- IEEE
- Keywords
- CO2; Multifunctional sensor; polyaniline (PANI); reduced graphene oxide (rGO); swelling; temperature
- Citation
- IEEE Sensors Journal
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- IEEE Sensors Journal
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/64034
- DOI
- 10.1109/JSEN.2026.3670850
- ISSN
- 1530-437X
1558-1748
- Abstract
- Thermal runaway in battery systems involves simultaneous swelling, temperature rise, and CO2 release, necessitating multifunctional sensors capable of detecting these stimuli without signal interference. In this study, we present a crosstalk-resistant multifunctional sensor designed to detect multiple physical stimuli without signal interference. The device incorporates a tempered-glass interlayer that physically and electrically isolates two sensing units. The lower layer, composed of Au and two polyaniline/reduced graphene oxide (PANI/rGO) capacitors, detects both the magnitude and direction of swelling through differential capacitance analysis. The upper sensing layer, fabricated from an APTES-treated PANI/rGO composite, enhances CO2 adsorption and is encapsulated with a selective PDMS layer to decouple temperature and gas responses. The sensor exhibited capacitance variations of 16.58% and 25.04% for square and rectangular swelling packs, respectively, with differential responses of 2.13% and 4.54%, enabling directional discrimination. For temperature sensing, a current variation of 23.8% was observed at 354 K, while CO2 detection at 100 ppm produced a current variation of 12.65%. Temperature effects were compensated using a fitting model, yielding a corrected CO2 response (ygas) of 8.8% at 100 ppm. Coefficients of determination of 0.9520 and 0.9426 were obtained under combined temperature-gas and temperature-only conditions, respectively, confirming the reliability of the model. Overall, the proposed sensor demonstrates a crosstalk-resistant design that enables independent detection of each stimulus while maintaining high selectivity and mechanical stability, underscoring its potential as a multiphysics sensing platform for industrial safety monitoring. © 2001-2012 IEEE.
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