New Way to Make Sensors That Detect Toxic Chemicals

Ohio State University researchers have developed a new method for making extremely pure, very small metal-oxide nanoparticles.

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Ohio State University researchers have developed a new method for making extremely pure, very small metal-oxide nanoparticles.
They are using this simple, fast, and low-temperature process to make materials for gas sensors that detect toxic industrial chemicals (TICs) and biological warfare agents.
Patricia Morris, associate professor of materials science and engineering at Ohio State, leads a team of researchers who develop solid materials that can detect toxic chemicals.
The challenge, she said, is to design a material that reacts quickly and reliably to a variety of chemicals, including TICs, when incorporated into a sensor.
“These are sensors that a soldier could wear on the battlefield, or a first responder could wear to an accident at a chemical plant,” Morris said.
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