September 28, 2023

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3D-printed plasmonic plastic enables large-scale optical sensor production

A filament of the plasmonic plastic. Due to its flexibility, the material can be formed into almost any shape. In this particular example, the filament is intended for use in 3D printers. Credit: Chalmers/Malin Arnesson
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A filament of the plasmonic plastic. Due to its flexibility, the material can be formed into almost any shape. In this particular example, the filament is intended for use in 3D printers. Credit: Chalmers/Malin Arnesson

In a multi-year project, researchers at Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden have developed plasmonic plastic—a type of composite material with unique optical properties that can be 3D-printed. This research has now resulted in 3D-printed optical hydrogen sensors that could play an important role in the transition to green energy and industry.

Interest in metal nanoparticles and their many different applications has grown rapidly, developing across a broad spectrum over the past two decades. What makes these particles so special is their ability to interact strongly with light. This makes them useful for a wide range of applications: as optical components for medical sensors and treatments, in photocatalysis to control , and in various types of gas sensors.

Plasmonic plastic

For six years, Chalmers researchers Christoph Langhammer, Christian Müller, Kasper Moth-Poulsen, Paul Erhart and Anders Hellman and their research teams collaborated in a research project on plasmonic . At the time the project began, plasmonic metal nanoparticles were being used primarily on flat surfaces and required production in advanced cleanroom laboratories.

The researchers' starting point was to ask: what if we could produce large volumes of plasmonic metal nanoparticles in a sustainable way that would make it possible to manufacture three-dimensional plasmonic objects? This is where the plastic came into the picture. The properties of plastic materials mean that they can be shaped into almost any form, are cost-effective, have upscaling potential, and can be 3D-printed.

And it worked. The project resulted in the development of new materials consisting of a mix (or composite) of a polymer and colloidal, plasmonically active, metal nanoparticles. With these materials, you can 3D-print objects of anything from a fraction of a gram up to several kilograms in weight. Some of the most important research results from the entire project have now been summarized in an article in Accounts of Chemical Research.

A 3D-printed sensing element made from plasmonic plastic for use in an optical hydrogen sensor. This particular element contains nanoparticles of the metal palladium, which gives it its gray color. Credit: Chalmers/Malin Arnesson
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A 3D-printed sensing element made from plasmonic plastic for use in an optical hydrogen sensor. This particular element contains nanoparticles of the metal palladium, which gives it its gray color. Credit: Chalmers/Malin Arnesson

3D-printed hydrogen sensors

Plasmonic sensors that can detect hydrogen are the target application for this type of plastic composite material that the researchers chose to focus on in their project. In doing so, they have pioneered an entirely new approach in the field of optical sensors based on plasmons, namely being able to 3D-print these sensors.

"Different types of sensors are needed to speed up development in medicine, or the use of hydrogen as an alternative carbon-free fuel. The interplay between the polymer and nanoparticles is the key factor when these sensors are fabricated from plasmonic plastic."

"In sensor applications, this type of plastic not only enables additive manufacturing (3D printing), as well as scalability in the material manufacturing process, but has the additional important function of filtering out all molecules except the smallest ones—in our application, these are the hydrogen molecules we want to detect. This prevents the sensor from deactivating over time," says Christoph Langhammer, professor at the Department of Physics, who led the project.

"The sensor is designed so that the metal nanoparticles change color when they come in contact with hydrogen, because they absorb the gas like a sponge. The color shift in turn alerts you immediately if the levels get too high, which is essential when you are dealing with hydrogen gas. At too high levels, it becomes flammable when mixed with air," says Christoph Langhammer.

A 3D-printed model of West-Sweden's landmark, Vinga Lighthouse. The color of the material is determined by the metal used for the nanoparticles in the plasmonic plastic, as well as their shape and size. Credit: Chalmers/Malin Arnesson
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A 3D-printed model of West-Sweden's landmark, Vinga Lighthouse. The color of the material is determined by the metal used for the nanoparticles in the plasmonic plastic, as well as their shape and size. Credit: Chalmers/Malin Arnesson

Many applications possible

While a reduction in the use of plastics is desirable in general, there are numerous advanced engineering applications that are only possible thanks to the unique properties of plastics. Plasmonic plastics may now make it possible to exploit the versatile toolbox of polymer technology for designing novel gas sensors, or applications in health and wearable technologies as other examples. It may even inspire artists and fashion designers due to its appealing and tunable colors.

"We have shown that the production of the material can be scaled up, that it is based on environment-friendly and resource-efficient synthesis methods for creating the nanoparticles, and is easy to implement. Within the project, we chose to apply the plasmonic plastic to hydrogen sensors, but in reality only our imagination is the limit for what it can be used for," says Christoph Langhammer.

How plasmonic plastic works

More information: Iwan Darmadi et al, Bulk-Processed Plasmonic Plastic Nanocomposite Materials for Optical Hydrogen Detection, Accounts of Chemical Research (2023). DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.3c00182

Journal information: Accounts of Chemical Research

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