Graphite flakes acted as the reducing agent during nanoparticle synthesis, helping to avoid more chemically intensive preparation methods.
Sustainability meets scalable manufacturingBy combining recycled materials, greener nanoparticle synthesis and 3D-printing, the study highlights how sustainable materials design can be integrated into advanced analytical technologies without compromising performance.
The work offers a scalable route towards smarter, more accessible sensing devices that could help expand environmental monitoring and next-generation analytical testing.
For researchers working across electrochemistry, 3D-printing, nanomaterials and sustainable materials science, the study provides valuable insight into how functional nanocomposites can be engineered for real-world sensing applications.
The full paper explores the synthesis and preparation of the filament, material characterisation and sensing performance in greater detail.
A greener route to high-performance sensors
To overcome this, the researchers engineered a nanocomposite filament by combining recycled polylactic acid (PLA) with the gold nanoparticle coated graphite, carbon black and castor oil.
Graphite flakes acted as the reducing agent during nanoparticle synthesis, helping to avoid more chemically intensive preparation methods. The resulting material demonstrated improved electron-transfer behaviour and enhanced sensing capability compared with conventional conductive filaments.
Importantly, the functional nanoparticle coated flakes were incorporated directly into the printable filament itself, avoiding the need for complex post-print modification.
Detecting toxic lead at ultra-low levels
As a proof of concept, the team used the 3D-printed electrodes to detect lead(II) contamination in river water samples.
The sensors achieved sub-ppb detection limits, which are below drinking-water safety thresholds, demonstrating the potential of the electrodes for rapid, low-cost environmental monitoring.
Beyond water testing, the platform could support future applications in biosensing and wearable technologies.
Sustainability meets scalable manufacturing
By combining recycled materials, greener nanoparticle synthesis and 3D-printing, the study highlights how sustainable materials design can be integrated into advanced analytical technologies without compromising performance.
The work offers a scalable route towards smarter, more accessible sensing devices that could help expand environmental monitoring and next-generation analytical testing.
For researchers working across electrochemistry, 3D-printing, nanomaterials and sustainable materials science, the study provides valuable insight into how functional nanocomposites can be engineered for real-world sensing applications. The full paper explores the synthesis and preparation of the filament, material characterisation and sensing performance in greater detail.
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