Recent Advances in Cellulose-Based Sensors
A special issue of Sensors (ISSN 1424-8220). This special issue belongs to the section "Physical Sensors".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2022) | Viewed by 696
Special Issue Editors
Interests: ionic polymeric transducers; bioderived materials for sensors, green sensors, sensor modeling, and characterization; mechanical sensors; energy harvesting; smart materials; smart sensing systems; neural networks; soft sensors
Interests: sensors; transducers; energy harvesting; MEMS; NEMS; fluxgate magnetometers; green and biodegradable sensors
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
During the 50th Earth Day, 22 April 2020, António Guterres, Secretary-General of the United Nations, released a message: “…Climate disruption is approaching a point of no return. We must act decisively to protect our planet from both the coronavirus and the existential threat of climate disruption”. He proposed six climate-related actions: “First: …we must deliver new jobs and businesses through a clean, green transition… Third: Fiscal firepower must drive a shift from the grey to green economy… Fourth: Public funds should be used to invest in the future…and flow to sustainable sectors and projects that help the environment and the climate…”
New ecologies such as IoT, smart cities, Industry 4.0, and precise agriculture will characterize economic development during the coming decades. Sensors can give a relevant contribution to a sustainable implementation of such ecologies, enabling the acquisition of data required for more efficient exploitation of energy and raw materials. Silicon-based electronic technologies cannot cope with the realization of green sensing systems.
It is estimated that 44.7x109 kg of e-waste was produced in 2016, 12.3x109 kg produced in the EU. Only 20% of this is formally recycled. E-wastes contain non-recyclable materials or pollutants that can contaminate the environment.
There is a need for novel materials and technologies, capable of giving meaningful answers to the need for sustainable development. Technologies for sensor fabrication are required that use renewable raw materials, save energy, and yield devices whose disposal does not produce any relevant environmental impact.
Bioderived polymers can allow producing green sensors. Cellulose has significant mechanical and electrical properties and is strong, biocompatible, and biodegradable. As a result, it has been proposed for realizing electronics, actuators, and sensors with a corresponding impressive growth of scientific contributions.
This Special Issue focuses on cellulose-based sensors. Contributions are sought on recent advantages in fabrication technologies, sensors, and sensing systems that exploit cellulose as the base of the materials.
Prof. Dr. Salvatore Graziani
Prof. Dr. Carlo Trigona
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- bioderived polymers and composites
- cellulose
- bacterial cellulose
- microbial cellulose
- green sensors
- chemical sensors
- mechanical sensors
- sensing systems
- circular economy
- sustainable development
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