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Xiaosong Du

Researcher at University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

Publications -  122
Citations -  3307

Xiaosong Du is an academic researcher from University of Electronic Science and Technology of China. The author has contributed to research in topics: Quartz crystal microbalance & Thin film. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 117 publications receiving 2286 citations.

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Facile, Flexible, Cost-Saving, and Environment-Friendly Paper-Based Humidity Sensor for Multifunctional Applications.

TL;DR: The paper-based humidity sensor has good flexibility and compatibility, endowing it with multifunctional applications for breath rate, baby diaper wetting, noncontact switch, skin humidity, and spatial localization monitoring.
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Self-powered room temperature NO2 detection driven by triboelectric nanogenerator under UV illumination

TL;DR: In this paper, a self-powered triboelectric gas sensor (TGS) composed by ZnO-RGO composite films was developed for room temperature nitrogen dioxide (NO2) detection under UV illumination (365 nm).
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A wireless energy transmission enabled wearable active acetone biosensor for non-invasive prediabetes diagnosis

TL;DR: This work presents a wirelessly powered wearable active acetone biosensor employing chitosan and reduced graphene oxide (RGO) as sensitive materials and paves the way for a new method of non-invasive prediabetes diagnosis.
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A high-performance flexible gas sensor based on self-assembled PANI-CeO2 nanocomposite thin film for trace-level NH3 detection at room temperature

TL;DR: A resistive-type flexible ammonia (NH3) sensor was proposed and developed in this paper, which was prepared by depositing polyaniline-cerium dioxide (PANI-CeO2) nanocomposite thin film on flexible polyimide (PI) substrate through in-situ self-assembly method.
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An integrated flexible self-powered wearable respiration sensor

TL;DR: In this article, an integrated triboelectric self-powered respiration sensor (TSRS) was developed for simultaneously monitoring human respiratory behaviors and NH3 concentration in exhaled gases.