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Gas Sensors

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Title: Gas Sensors


1
Gas Sensors
  • Fatemeh Bagheri
  • Under supervision of Dr. Haratidadeh

2
Contents
3
History
Gas leak detection methods became a concern after
the effects of harmful gases on human health were
discovered. Before modern electronic sensors,
early detection methods relied on less precise
detectors. Through the 19th and early 20th
centuries, coal miners would bring canaries down
to the tunnels with them as an early detection
system against life-threatening gases.
1927 Dr. Oliver W. Johnson invented the first
catalytic combustion gas sensor leading to the
first combustible gas Indicator
4
Introduction
  • A gas sensor (or gas detector) is a device that
    detects the presence of gasses in an area.
  • A sensor is a technological device that detects /
    senses a signal, physical condition and chemical
    compounds.
  • They are manufactured as portable or stationary
    (fixed) units and work by signifying high levels
    of gases through a series of audible or visible
    indicators, such as alarms, lights or a
    combination of signals.

5
Gas Sensor
During the last fifty years, different studies
have established various branches of gas sensing
technology. Among them, the three major areas
that receive the most attention are investigation
of different kinds of sensors, research about
sensing principles, and fabrication techniques.
6
Indicators of the Performance of Gas sensors
7
Application
  • industrial production (e.g.,methane detection in
    mines)
  • automotive industry (e.g., detection of polluting
    gases from vehicles)
  • (3) medical applications (e.g., electronic noses
    simulating the human olfactory system)
  • (4) indoor air quality supervision (e.g.,
    detection of carbon monoxide)
  • (5) environmental studies (e.g., greenhouse gas
    monitoring)

8
Application
9
Application
10
Application
  • industrial production (e.g.,methane detection in
    mines)
  • automotive industry (e.g., detection of polluting
    gases from vehicles)
  • (3) medical applications (e.g., electronic noses
    simulating the human olfactory system)
  • (4) indoor air quality supervision (e.g.,
    detection of carbon monoxide)
  • (5) environmental studies (e.g., greenhouse gas
    monitoring)

11
Metal Oxide Semicondcutor
  • The most common sensing materials are metal oxide
    semiconductors, which provide sensors with
    several advantages such as low cost and high
    sensitivity.
  • Sensors based on metal oxide semiconductors are
    mainly applied to detect target gases through
    redox reactions between the target gases and the
    oxide surface.
  • The resistance variation could be detected by
    measuring the change of capacitance, work
    function, mass, optical characteristics or
    reaction energy.
  • shikumi.gif

12
Metal Oxide Semiconductor
  • Metal oxides, such as SnO2, CuO, Cr2O3, V2O5, WO3
    and TiO2, can be utilized to detect combustible,
    reducing, or oxidizing gases with sensors which
    are mainly based on the resistance change
    responses to the target gases.
  • Among all sensors based on metal oxide
    semiconductors, the sensitivity of SnO2-based
    ones is relatively high, leading to its greater
    popularity.

13
Polymers
  • Generally, sensors based on metal oxide
    semiconductors exhibit significantly greater
    sensitivity to inorganic gases like ammonia and a
    few kinds of volatile organic compounds (VOCs)
    like alcohol (C2H5OH) and formaldehyde. however,
    some other VOCs which could cause adverse health
    effects when their concentration over a certain
    threshold cannot be detected by metal oxide
    semiconductor-based sensors.
  • polymers used for gas sensing can be further
    classified into two groups
  • conducting polymers
  • non-conducting polymers.

14
Polymers
  • conducting polymers
  • it is well established that the electrical
    conductivity of these conducting polymers is
    affected through exposure to diverse organic and
    inorganic gases.
  • Conducting polymers that can be used as gas
    sensing materials include polypyrrole (PPy),
    polyaniline (PAni), polythiophene (PTh) and their
    derivatives

Each polymer changes its size, and therefore its
resistance, by a different amount, making a
pattern of the change
15
Polymers
  • Non-Conducting Polymers Non-conducting polymers
    have been widely utilized as sorptive coatings on
    different sensor devices.
  • Polymers with different properties or
    physisorption mechanisms can be coated onto
    respective transducers. For instance, polymer
    layers causing changes in resonance frequency,
    dielectric constant and enthalpy upon
    absorption/desorption of analytes can be
    respectively coated on mass-sensitive.g. (Quartz
    Crystal Microbalance (QCM), Surface Acoustic Wave
    (SAW) and SurfaceTransverse Wave (STW),
    capacitive (dielectric) and calorimetric sensor
    devices.

16
  • Polymer-based gas sensors have advantages such
    as
  • high sensitivities
  • short response times
  • operate at room temperature
  • low cost of fabrication
  • simple and portable structures
  • dissolving the polymers into the solution in a
    uniform way

17
Carbon nanotubes
  • Conventional sensing materials like metal oxide
    semiconductors have to deal with the problem of
    poor sensitivity at room temperature, while
    carbon nanotubes (CNTs) attract more attention
    because of their unique properties and have
    become the most promising materials for
    high-sensitive gas sensors.
  • As a kind of promising sensing material, CNTs,
    have been found to possess electrical properties
    and are highly sensitive to extremely small
    quantities of gases, such as alcohol, ammonia
    (NH3), carbon dioxide (CO2) and nitrogen oxide
    (NOx) at room temperature, while other materials
    like metal oxides have to be heated by an
    additional heater in order to operate normally.
  • When utilized as sensing materials, on the one
    hand, CNTs are often decorated with other
    materials in order to enhance their sensitivity
    and selectivity.

18
Carbon nanotubes
  • SWCNTs have been employed in RFID tag antennas
    for toxic gas sensing, in which the backscattered
    power from the tag antenna would be easily
    detected by the RFID reader if the concentration
    of ammonia rises to 4.

19
Moisture Absorbing Material
sensors like that could be located inside walls
or floors of buildings, mainly in order to
prevent costly damage due to mold or decay and it
could also be positioned under hidden water pipes
for detection of leakage. Other applications
detecting humidity levels, like water vapor
concentration monitoring for food storage, could
also utilize methods like those based on moisture
absorbing materials and RFID tags.
20
Optical Methods
Optical methods for gas sensing are mostly based
on spectroscopy. Only a few commercial gas
sensors are based on optical principles.
Spectroscopic analysis mainly involves techniques
based on absorption and emission
spectrometry. there are many types of improved
absorption spectrometry including
Differential Optical Absorption Spectroscopy
(DOAS), Tunable Diode Laser Absorption
Spectroscopy (TDLAS), Raman Light Detection and
Ranging (LIDAL), Differential Absorption LIDAR
(DIAL), Intra-Cavity Absorption Spectrometry
(ICAS), etc. Due to the mentioned factors, these
techniques are more commonly applied to gas
detectors, which allow for more complicated
system design and higher cost to gain excellent
sensitivity, selectivity and reliability, than
gas sensors.
21
Optical Methods
photoacoustic spectroscopy
22
Calorimetric Methods
  • Pellistors constitute a major class of electrical
    gas sensors.
  • Specifically, pellistors can be divided in two
    types Catalytic and Thermal Conductivity.
  • .

23
Acoustic Methods
  • Surface acoustic wave sensor SAWs can be excited
    on a piezoelectric crystal by the use of an
    inter-digitated transducer (IDT). The most common
    substrates for SAWs are ST-cut (stress
    temperaturecompensated) quartz or LiNbO3.

24
(No Transcript)
25
Feature
Imagine being a thousand miles from home, and
your mother cooks your favorite meal for you.
Then she takes a photo of it and sends it by
e-mail. When you open the photo, a wave of
aroma--your Mom's cooking--fills the air
26
Reference
  • A Survey on Gas Sensing Technology,
    journal/Sensors 2012, 12, 9635-9665
    doi10.3390/s120709635
  • https//www.citytech.com/loader/frame_loader.asp?p
    agehttps//www.citytech.com/technology/pellistors
    .asp
  • http//sensors.blogfa.com/post-36.aspx
  • A review of gas sensors employed in electronic
    nose applications, Sensor Review, Volume 24
    Number 2 2004 pp. 181-198
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gas_detector
  • http//www.chromedia.org/chromedia?waxtrappwlqdcD
    sHqnOxmOlIEcClBwFjEsubNavrwhpbjDsHqnOxmOlIEcClBw
    FjEQ
  • Peter Hauptmann, sensors principles and
    applications
  • http//www.figaro.co.jp/en/technicalinfo/principle
    /catalytic-type.html
  • Chemical Sensors for Electronic Nose Systems,
    Microchim. Acta 149, 117 (2005)

27
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