Gas sensors based on field effect transistors measure the change in work function between a gas-sensitive material and a reference material.
Other structures use a structure in which the air gap with the gas-sensitive layer and the FET structure for readout are separated, as shown in
The structure of a gas sensor based on the field effect transistor is shown schematically according to
In all of these gas sensors, in addition to reactions to target gases to be measured, undesired signals from other gases also appear frequently, which under some circumstances are superimposed on the useful signal in multiple intensity and thus lead to incorrect measurements. Furthermore, the signal level to the target gas may be modified by the presence of an interfering gas.
Improvements in the prior art for avoiding drawbacks have consisted of:
By optimizing the gas-sensitive materials and the reference materials located on the transistor, the influence of interfering gases can be reduced to some extent with regard to selectivity.
If the interfering gas is known, the influence of the interfering gas can be offset by a second sensor sensitive to this gas. In reality, this second sensor again has only limited sensitivity, so that additional cross sensitivities are imparted to the sensor system. Also, the reference coating has little promise when the level of the interfering signal exceeds the useful signal by a multiple.
Interfering gases may be permeable to the target gas but filters for interfering gases may suppress them. In this case, on the one hand, the interfering gas is removed by activated charcoal, for example. However, the limited filter capacity here has to be considered in long-term operation, and the gas can break through the filter when the filter capacity is reached. In the case of sensors that are operated at elevated temperature, the interfering gas may be converted by a chemical reaction to components that cause no sensor signal, for example such as catalytic filters to decompose alcohols as disclosed by DE 43 10 914. Such filters do not have the aforementioned problems when filter capacity is reached. To be able to utilize such filters, however, temperatures >300° C. are needed, for one thing, so that such methods cannot be used for structural elements with Si chips and a maximum operating temperature of about 150° C.
The goal of this invention is to increase the selectivity of FET-based gas sensors.
This is accomplished both by the combination of features of Claim 1, and by those of Claim 11. Advantageous refinements are described in the subclaims.
In general, the invention supplements the structure of an FET-based gas sensor, of FETs according to the prior art according to
Actually, the gas channel for feeding the measurement gas is made by lengthening the air gap between the channel insulation of the FET and the sensitive layer on a carrier substrate applied by hybrid technology. The electrochemical element introduced in the gas feed channel to the sensitive area consists of at least two active electrodes to which a voltage is applied, at least one of which must be in direct contact with the relevant measured gas mixture, and at least one of which is contacted with an active ion conductor at a typical operating temperature of the FET.
The limitation of the “inward-directed” gas diffusion is great enough so that the electrochemical element is able adequately to convert interfering gas in the application to a gas no longer detectable in the active sensor area.
When a proton conductor is used (hydrogen ion conductor), both oxidizable and reducible interfering gases can be degraded in a comparable manner.
Exemplary embodiments will be described below with reference to the accompanying Figures that do not limit the invention.
In the structure shown in
Materials for the Structure Used:
The carrier substrate here is usually any desired nonconductor that must only allow the preparation of the layers placed on it. Examples of this are ceramics, for example such as Al2O3, AlN, or Si3N4, glass, or suitable polymeric materials, for example conventional PCB materials like FR4 or the like.
The active electrodes, at least on their surface, consist of a stable and catalytically active metal. Metals that are well suited in general are metals of the platinum group and their alloys, for example Pt, Pd, Pt/Rh, or silver.
The layer joining the two electrodes consists of a material that conducts ions in the temperature range below 150° C.
The entry of gas and its diffusion to the sensor area is limited so sharply by the geometry of the gas inlet that the small amounts of gas can be reacted by the electrochemical filter and be carried forward, and an amount of target gas that is sufficient for its detection is allowed to pass through.
An operating procedure for the selective detection of a target gas in a gas mixture will be described, in which the target gas is detected in the sensor area that is bounded by the gas-sensitive layer and the readout transistor, and in which the measured gas mixture to be examined is previously so modified by the electrochemical filter described above that selective detection of the target gas in the sensor area is possible.
Basic Function of the Electrochemical Filter:
Depending on the polarity of the applied d.c. voltage Udiss, one of the two electrodes El 1 or El 2 acquires an oxidizing action on the gas diffusing in the gap, and the other acquires a reducing action. For example, if El 2, which is in the gap according to
Of course only oxidizable gases that are more easily oxidizable than the target gas can be removed by the procedure described. The same applies similarly to reducible gases.
Examples of common gases that can be removed by electrochemical reaction are shown in the following list:
The electrochemical reaction of various gas components can be brought about by an electrochemical filter by selective application of a voltage of given polarity and magnitude.
Depending on the polarity of the electrodes, this system can be used either for the degradative reaction of oxidizing gases or for the degradative reaction of reducing gases. The magnitude of the voltage to be applied in this case is typically between 200 mV and 2 V.
When using an oxygen ion conductor, there is often the desire to detect gases with reducing action or CO2 with FET gas sensors. In this case, the NO2 with oxidizing action that often occurs at the same time in the application may lead to distinct interfering reactions in many FET gas sensors. The reactive NO2 can be converted to the usually non-interfering NO according to the equation
NO2+2e−→NO+O2−
by applying a negative voltage to El 2. The NO can also be decomposed with no residue by a stronger negative voltage:
2NO+4e−→N2+2O2−
The oxygen is taken up by the ion conductor.
Gaseous oxygen is formed on the electrode El 1 as a counterreaction.
2O2−−4e−→O2
With reversed polarity, unwanted reducible gases can be removed on El 1, for example according to the following equations
2NH3+3O2−→N2+3H2O+6e−
2H2+2O2−→2H2O+4e−
As a counterreaction on the electrode El 1, the gaseous oxygen is taken up.
O2+4e−→2O2−
By Using a Proton Conductor (Hydrogen Ion Conductor):
As a counterreaction, gaseous hydrogen is taken up as hydrogen ion in the proton conductor at the electrode El 1.
H2→2H++2e−.
The above reaction can of course be used directly to remove hydrogen if the electrodes wired in this way are in the gap. Similarly, NH3 or hydrocarbon HC, for example, can be oxidized with an oxidizing connection of El 1.
2NH3→N2+6H++6e−
6H++6e−→3H2
The comparable mechanisms also apply to other ion conductors.
Materials that have ion-conducting properties in the temperature range below 150° C. are preferred as materials for the ion conductor. Examples are listed below:
An example of an oxygen ion conductor is LaF3.
Hydrogen Ion Conductors:
For example, hydrogen uranyl phosphate tetrahydrate (HUO2PO4.4H2O), NH4TaWO6, NAFION, aluminum silicate+Na2O or Li2O or K2O, ion-conducting sodium compounds such as Nasicon Na1+xZr2P3−xSixO12,Na5YSi4O12;
ion-conducting lithium compounds such as lithium nitride, lithium titanium phosphate.
Special Advantages of the Invention:
The selectivity of a gas sensor system can be substantially increased by the system described by removing gases that lead to incorrect measurements.
Electrochemical filters have the conspicuous advantage over ordinary filters that they do not become consumed or saturated, and that more stable long-term continuous operation is therefore possible. In addition, they are smaller in structural shape.
Electrochemical filters are not statically acting filters; their simple control by the dissociation voltage Udiss permits the implementation of self-monitoring and self-calibrating functions.
With the gas sensors according to the invention, there is the desire to keep the infeed gas diffusion as small as possible to bring about complete removal of interfering gases with the least possible electrochemical filter power. This is accomplished by the form of embodiment according to
Multistage electrochemical filters are also provided for in the structures according to the invention; in other words there are multiple El 2s in the gas diffusion gap that consist of different materials and/or are operated at different voltages.
Self-monitoring and Self-calibration Functions:
The filtering action of the electrochemical filters is produced selectively by the electrical control of El 1 and El 2. The filtering action can be varied by varying the control voltage Udiss, which itself can be used for the reaction to remove the target gas.
In addition to self-monitoring functions, this also makes sequential measurement of multiple gases possible, for example by continuously increasing the filtering action.
If the electrochemical filters for the gas to be detected are so designed, the target gas can be removed from the detection area by modulation of the control voltage, and an artificial zero point can be provided in this way. Baseline variations of the sensor can thus be eliminated efficiently.
Activation of the Target Gas
An undetectable gas can be converted into a gas to which the gas-sensitive material reacts by the system described.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10 2004 019 641.9 | Apr 2004 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/04278 | 4/21/2005 | WO | 2/15/2007 |