The invention relates to a method of producing a gas sensor, a gas sensor, and a flame spray reactor.
Although many different metal oxides have been investigated as sensing materials for semi-conducting gas sensors, tin oxide (SnO2)-based sensors are the most commonly used. Different deposition/sensitive layer fabrication techniques have already been tested. The successful sensors are generally those with thick (several tens of micrometers) nano-crystalline (about ten nanometer) films. State-of-the-art sensors are based on pre-processed powders generally obtained through wet chemistry routes such as sol-gel decomposition of organometallic precursors and hydrothermal treatment of colloidal solutions. These are further functionalized by adding small quantities of well dispersed noble metals in the form of surface additives. For these materials, deposition methods have been developed that are compatible with both classical thick-film and silicon thin-film technologies substrates.
State-of-the-art sensors have important technical limitations that are generally related to the way in which the sensitive materials are processed. For example, the wet chemistry methods employed for both preparation and functionalization of base materials are difficult to control and as a result both the size distribution in the base material, and the amount and distribution of the noble metal additives, are rather broad. This results in significant variation of gas-sensing properties from batch to batch (30% variation is common in the industry). The fabrication of the sensitive materials is labour and time intensive, with typical batch production times on the order of days with small batch volumes in the range of 100 g. Furthermore, the deposition of sensing layers, either by classical screen-printing or more sophisticated drop deposition techniques, is performed after the additional step of combining the sensitive material with organic carriers. This increases processing time and costs related to deposition equipment and handling. Recent advances have been made using electro-spray deposition for sensor applications but limitations include processing time and the required post-processing to obtain nano-crystalline material. Additionally, variations in the deposition parameters such as new layer, layer stacks (two or more layers on top of each other) or varying layer thickness are difficult to implement and require repetition of the full process.
In JP 2002 323 473 a process of depositing a functionalized covering (protective) layer on a sensing layer by means of plasma flame spraying is described. However, this process involves plasma and results in a protective instead of a sensing layer, and, therefore, is different to this invention. Furthermore, separate processing steps for creating the sensing layer and the covering layer are involved.
In JP 2002 310 983 a gas sensor is described which has an electrolyte sensing layer coated with a ceramic by plasma flame spraying. However, this process involves plasma and focuses on the enhancement of the reliability and selectivity of a solid electrolyte gas sensor, and, therefore, differs from the direct formation of a highly porous gas sensing layer as described in this invention.
It is the object of the invention to provide a simplified method of fabricating a gas sensor.
This object is achieved by a method with the features of claim one. Advantageous variants are given in claims 2-11.
Within the scope of the invention also falls a sensor with the features of claim 12. Preferred embodiments are described in claims 13-15.
The invention also relates to a sensor fabrication system having the features of claim 16. Advantageous embodiments are described in claims 17 and 18.
Flame spray pyrolysis (FSP) can be successfully employed for the preparation of metal oxide, in particular SnO2 nanoparticles for gas-sensing applications. Single crystalline (tin) oxide particles of about 20 nm size can be produced with FSP. FSP has the advantages of direct control of particle size and the ability to completely manufacture nano-powders in a single high-temperature step without further processing of the microstructure and noble metal particle size in subsequent annealing steps in contrast to conventional spray pyrolysis or wet methods in general. The main advantage of this invention is the use of the FSP technology for directly depositing metal oxide nanoparticles, e. g. SnO2, and/or mixed metal oxide nanoparticles (where more than one metal compound is present within a single particle), e.g. ZnO/SnO2 and/or functionalized (mixed) metal oxide nanoparticles, e.g. Pt/SnO2 or Pt/ZnO/SnO2, from the aerosol phase onto sensor substrates.
According to the invention multiple particle deposition from the aerosol phase is achieved. FSP is used for direct (in-situ) deposition of pure and functionalized (doped) sensing materials. Functionalization is a kind of doping, i.e. a surface doping, which is different from semiconductor doping. Functionalization occurs by in-situ deposition of noble metals and/or metal oxides and/or mixed metal oxides, different from the metal oxide or mixed metal oxide of the bulk sensing layer, to the particles of the sensing layer. As mentioned above, current state-of-the-art sensors have important technical limitations, which are partly related to the deposition procedure performed after the additional step of combining the sensitive material with organic carriers. This adds both processing time and cost related to the deposition equipment and handling. Additionally, variations in the deposition parameters such as including a new layer, layer stacks (two or more layers on top of each other), or varying layer thickness or functionalization (doping) of the layers and batch production are difficult to implement and require repetition of the full process. Using the inventive in-situ FSP deposition technique eliminates these difficulties and functionalization of the sensing layers can be realized during a single processing step on ceramic (planar) and micro-machined substrates by using appropriate masks. The method is in principle applicable to all materials that are able to be synthesized by FSP, and in principle any kind of substrate may be used for gas sensor fabrication.
An inventive sensor fabrication system including a flame spray reactor may be used to produce metal oxide nanoparticles, e. g. SnO2, and mixed metal oxide nanoparticles, e.g. ZnO/SnO2, and possibly for functionalizing of those, e. g. to produce Pt/SnO2 Pt/ZnO/SnO2 nanoparticles by the flame spray pyrolysis (FSP) method. Product particles are directly deposited on a sensor substrate.
Product particles may be directly deposited on e.g. alumina substrates with prefabricated electrode assemblies. Each sensor substrate may consist of interdigitated electrodes, e.g. Pt-electrodes, on the front side and heater on the back side and an active sensing area of 7.0×3.5 mm2. With interdigitated electrodes a low geometry factor can be achieved for a given sensor area. A mask may be used to deposit the particles within the desired sensor area. The substrate may be mounted on a water-cooled copper block equipped with a thermocouple to enable control of the substrate temperature during the deposition process. The substrate temperature may be maintained at, for example, Tsub=120° C. in order to avoid water condensation on the substrate. This may be done by keeping the substrate holder at a constant temperature (Tsub).
The deposition substrate is, for example, centred 200 mm above the nozzle in a face down orientation. At this position the gas temperature in front of the nozzle is, for example, Tgas=500° C. Both temperatures (Tsub and Tgas) are preferably maintained throughout the deposition process. The liquid precursor is prepared, for example, by diluting tin(II) 2-ethylhexanoic acid in toluene to obtain a 0.5 M precursor solution. For Pt/SnO2 synthesis, appropriate amounts of platinum acetylacetonate may be added to the solution.
The sensing layer is formed by particle transport in the flame environment and deposition on the substrate. Particles are transported towards the deposition area of the substrate by free and forced convection in the free-jet of the flame. The substrate is advantageously located at the stagnation point of the impinging jet.
Although diffusion of particles is sufficient in many cases, advantageously thermophoresis is used as the main mechanism of particle transport to the sensor substrate. As thermophoresis is not particle size dependent for particles smaller than 100 nm, the particles on the sensor are identical to those generated in the flame. Even at temperature differences between the gas and the sensor surface of 50 K and less (in the case of a deposition thickness of 100 μm) thermophoresis leads to an effective layer growth rate of about 0.1 μm/s, depending on the applied flame conditions.
In-situ functionalization of metal oxide, e.g. SnO2 nanoparticles with noble metals, e.g. Pt or Pd, is an effective method for promoting the detection of CO and is possible by the versatile FSP technique. Functionalization of metal oxide, e.g. SnO2, nanoparticles with, for example, 0.2wt % noble metal, e.g. Pt, is performed in a single process, in-situ, during deposition of the sensing layers. The addition of a noble metal has no influence on (tin) oxide grain size, layer thickness and porosity. Functionalization improves the sensor performance, i.e. by increasing sensor in response to CO reproducibility by signal and analytical sensitivity both in dry and humid air. High sensing layer porosity is advantageous as the porosity provides a large interfacial area between the gas and the sensing layer.
For example, (30±3) μm SnO2 porous layer thickness and 0.2 wt % Pt/SnO2-based sensors have analytical sensitivity to 10 ppm CO of 0.17 and 0.50, respectively. Accordingly, (30±3) μm SnO2 and 0.2 wt % Pt/SnO2-based sensors allow the CO detection with the precision of 7 ppm and 2 ppm, respectively at 400° C.
Comparing sensors based on the same material (pure and functionalized SnO2) synthesized by the flame spray pyrolysis but deposited by different techniques (i.e. by screen-printing and direct FSP deposition) clearly shows the better performance of the FSP directly deposited sensors, i.e. direct (in-situ) deposition of pure and functionalized (doped) sensing materials.
Additionally, the flexibility of FSP in direct deposition of sensing layers offers a straightforward possibility to change the thickness of the deposited layer by varying the deposition time. Variation of deposition time does not change the net porosity of the layers, grain size or the chemical state of the additive, e.g. Pt. Accordingly, the FSP deposition method gives a unique possibility to adjust the sensor's characteristics by varying the deposition time and, consequently, the sensing layer thickness.
The inventive method enables the production of highly-crystalline (e.g. SnO2) nano-powders with sub-micrometer grain sizes. The metal oxide nano-crystals may be functionalized by in-situ inclusion of noble metal clusters during the production of the nano-powders. Nano-crystalline tin-oxide can be directly in-situ deposited forming porous layers onto alumina sensor substrates. The as-obtained sensors exhibit extremely good homogeneity of the sensing layer and good sensor performance. This innovative process has obvious advantages such as superior control over the microstructure and morphology of the nano-powders compared to classical wet-chemistry methods. Furthermore, the process is clean and fast (minutes compared to days for comparable quantities) and also allows for in-situ functionalization. The direct deposition results in fully formed functionalized sensing layers on various substrates. The in-situ prepared sensors of pure SnO2 and Pt doped SnO2 are reproducible and have a very low detection limit for CO together with high sensor response. Control of the sensing layer thickness during the deposition process adds a further tool for tuning sensor performance in addition to its chemical composition. Furthermore, in principle, it is possible and straightforward to deposit a combination of different layers having different functions (e. g. filtering, sensing) in the same deposition process, enabling direct construction of fully functional sensors in very short times using a simple, clean and flexible fabrication process. Layer stacks of layers having different functionalities may easily be fabricated by changing the precursor substance during the deposition process and thus changing the aerosol composition.
The invention may be more fully understood by referring to the drawings. The drawings refer to specific examples only.
a-3d show scanning electron microscopy images of deposited sensing layers.
A schematic of a FSP reactor 1 is shown in
a-3d summarize the scanning electron microscopy (SEM) analysis of an SnO2 deposit on a sensor substrate.
The inset of
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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04029141.1 | Dec 2004 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/12604 | 11/25/2005 | WO | 00 | 6/30/2009 |