The present invention relates generally to the field of gas sensors and specifically to gas sensors featuring electrical breakdown in the vicinity of carbon nanotube tips.
Gas sensors operate by a variety of fundamentally different mechanisms. Ionization sensors work by fingerprinting the ionization characteristics of distinct gases. See for example the sensors described at www.ertresponse.com/sops/2114.pdf (1994) and www.srigc.com/FID.pdf (1998). However, such sensors are limited by their large bulky architecture, high power consumption and risky high-voltage operation.
Other sensors, such as solid state gas sensors, are based on semi-conducting metal oxides, silicon devices, organic materials and gas responsive polymers or ceramics. To achieve high chemical sensitivity, semi-conducting metal oxide sensors are operated at elevated temperatures (200 to 600° C.) in order to achieve the required chemical reactivity between gas molecules and the sensor material. This need for high temperature operation increases the device complexity and renders them unsuitable for real-time environmental monitoring. On the other hand, conducting polymers and organic semi-conductors are suitable for room temperature operation, but exhibit limited sensitivity, and are characterized by very high resistivity (sample resistance of greater than 10 giga ohms).
Carbon nanotube gas sensors have also been proposed. Most of these sensors are based on the chemical sensitivity of semi-conducting nanotubes. These sensors are based on a principle that an electrical conductance of semi-conducting carbon nanotubes changes sensitively at room temperature on exposure to several gases due to charge transfer between adsorbed gas molecules and nanotubes. See, Science 287, 1801-1804, Mar. 10, 2000; Science 287, 622-625, Jan. 28, 2000; H. Dai et al., “Carbon nanotube chemical and mechanical sensors”, 3rd International Workshop on Structural Health Monitoring, Stanford University, Calif., Sept. 11-14, 2001; IEEE Sensors 2, 82-88, April 2002; and Proc. of the IEEE International Microwave Symposium, Piscataway, N.J., Vol. 2, pp. 639-42, 2002.
Although the above gas sensors have a high sensitivity, they are limited by several factors, such as the inability to identify gases with low adsorption energies, poor diffusion kinetics or poor charge transfer with nanotubes. It is also challenging to use this technique to distinguish between gases or gas mixtures. Gases in different concentrations could produce the same net change in conductance as produced by a single pure gas. Nanotube conductance is also very sensitive to changes in environmental conditions (moisture, temperature, gas-flow velocity), and chemisorption could cause irreversible changes in nanotube conductivity.
A self-sustaining discharge gas sensor with a carbon nanotube cathode has also been proposed. X. Li, et al., 15th Int'l Vacuum Microelectronics Conf. Proc. (2002 IVMC-IFES), Jul. 7-11 (2002), Lyon, France (http://ivmc2002.univ-lvon1.fr/Abstracts/EA—020.pdf) It is noted that the listing of this article herein is not an admission that this article necessarily constitutes prior art against the present invention. The present inventors believe that this article describes a gas sensor based on Townsend Discharge principle, where carbon nanotubes, believed to be multi-walled carbon nanotubes are deposited on a rounded, metal cathode tip. The sensor also contains an anode electrode separate from the nanotube coated cathode tip. By measuring the ionization voltage and current between the anode and the cathode tip, the gas species and concentration, respectively, may be determined. Other gas sensors of this general type are described in C. Zhu et al, “Study of discharge gas sensor with carbon nanotube,” Proceedings of the 14th International Vacuum Microelectronics Conference, pp. 13-14, University of California, Davis, Aug. 13-16, 2001 and in D. Pinghu, and L. Baoming, “Study of a new gas sensor based on electrical conductance of gases in a high electric field,” Chinese Journal of Scientific Instrument 19, 3, 1998.
However, the present inventors believe that the discharge gas sensor described in the Li et al., article also suffers from several draw backs. First, the present inventors believe that the Li et al. sensor is adapted to determine the species and/or concentration of a pure gas analyte rather than the species and/or concentration of analyte gas or gases present in a gas mixture. Furthermore, the present inventors realized that the gas detection area and the nanotube density and size uniformity in the sensor of Li et al. are lower than desired because the nanotubes are formed on narrow, rounded tips. These draw backs may lead to poor or non-uniform gas sensing results.
An ionization gas sensor includes a first electrode and a second electrode, such as cathode and anode electrodes. The second electrode is a carbon nanotube film having a carbon nanotube density such that the film behaves as a conducting sheet electrode. The sensor also includes a voltage source electrically connected to the first and to the second electrodes. The voltage source is adapted to generate an electric field near tips of carbon nanotubes in the carbon nanotube film which induces electrical breakdown of an analyte gas, which leads to a self-sustaining inter-electrode arc discharge.
Unless otherwise indicated, “a” or “an” means “one or more”.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention provide an ionization gas sensor that overcomes some of the limitations described in the previous section. The ionization microsensor uses the extremely high electric fields that are generated near nanotube tips as a means of inducing electrical breakdown of the analyte gas at relatively low voltages. The sensor may be used to determine the species and/or the concentration of a range of gases and gas mixtures the are broken down at the carbon nanotube tips.
The sensor contains an electrode comprising nanotubes that are formed in a shape of a film. The nanotubes in the film are densely packed and the inter-tube tunneling effects result in the aggregate nanotube film behaving like a conducting sheet electrode. Thus, the sensor includes a nanotube electrode with a high density and uniformity and a comparatively large sensing area. The nanotube electrode is preferably the anode electrode, which reduces the potential damage to the nanotubes in the electrode. The sharp tips of nanotubes generate very high electric fields at relatively low voltages, lowering breakdown voltages several-fold in comparison to traditional electrodes, and thereby enabling compact, battery-powered and safe operation of the sensor.
The sensor shows good sensitivity and selectivity, and is substantially unaffected by extraneous factors such as temperature, humidity, and gas flow. The simple, low-cost sensors can be used in a variety of applications, such as environmental monitoring, sensing in chemical processing plants, in material composition analysis and in gas detection for counter-terrorism.
It is preferred that the average separation between the nanotube centers in the densely packed film be below 300 nm, such as 40 to 100 nm, to allow the film to act as a conducting sheet electrode. In such a conducting sheet electrode, current is conducted laterally between adjacent electrodes. Thus, an electrical contact to the nanotubes may be made by placing a metal contact, such as an Al or Au contact, in contact with an upper surface of a portion of the nanotube film. Alternatively, the nanotube film may be grown on the metal contact layer 5, such as on an Au contact layer formed over a substrate 6.
Any suitable nanotube length may be used, such as 20 to 100 microns, for example. It is preferred that the length of the nanotubes in the film be substantially uniform, such as a length that is within 10% of an average length.
The MWNT film shown in
Optionally, the as-grown nanotubes shown in
The sensor also contains a cathode electrode 7. The cathode electrode is a conductive sheet, such as an Al sheet. Other suitable conductive materials may also be used. In an alternative embodiment of the present invention, the nanotube film is used as a cathode electrode while the non-nanotube conductive sheet is used as an anode electrode.
The electrodes 3, 7 are separated by an insulating spacer 9, such as a glass insulator. For example, a 180 micron thick spacer may be used. Other suitable insulating spacers may also be used. A gas detection volume 11 is formed between the electrodes. The analyte gas is provided into this volume through an inlet opening or conduit. The arc-discharge propagates between the electrodes through this detection volume.
The sensor is electrically connected to a voltage source 13 which provides a potential difference between the anode and cathode electrodes. Any suitable voltage source may be used, such as an electrochemical device, such as one or more batteries hooked up in series or a small fuel cell, or a power outlet (i.e., such as an outlet connected to a power grid or a generator that is adapted to provide a DC voltage). Preferably, an adjustable voltage source is used to provide a range of voltages between the electrodes. The sensor also contains a breakdown voltage measuring device, such as a volt meter, which may be integrated into the voltage source or positioned separately from the voltage source. The sensor is also preferably connected to a current measurement device 15, such as an ammeter, which measures the discharge current at various voltages. The ammeter may be integrated into the voltage source and/or the voltage measuring device, or positioned separately from the voltage source and voltage measuring device.
The gas sensor operates as follows. Controlled DC voltage is applied between the anode (vertically aligned MWNT film) and the cathode (Al sheet), which are separated by the glass insulator. Individual MWNTs within the film, owing to their nanometer scale tip radius of about 15 nm, create very high nonlinear electric fields near the tips. This hastens the breakdown process due to formation of a ‘corona’ or conducting filament of highly ionized gas that surrounds the MWNT tips. This corona promotes the formation of a powerful electron avalanche or plasma streamer that bridges the gap between the electrodes, and allows a self-sustaining inter electrode discharge to be created at relatively low voltages.
This technique may be used to identify unknown analyte gas species, either in a pure gas or in a gas mixture. The precise breakdown voltage provides the ‘fingerprint’ for the gas to be identified. It is well established that at constant temperature and pressure every gas has a unique breakdown electric field. Thus, for a fixed inter-electrode spacing, the breakdown voltage of each gas is unique and depends mainly on the electric field and is only weakly affected by concentration of the gas over a wide range of concentrations, as will described in more detail below with respect to
This arc-discharge technique may also be used to determine a concentration of a known or unknown pure gas analyte or of a known or unknown gas analyte in a mixture. The self-sustaining arc-discharge current generated at breakdown is a characteristic property of the number of gas molecules per unit volume that are available for conduction. This implies that by monitoring the self-sustaining discharge current generated at breakdown, the concentration of the known or unknown gas species can be established. Because the arc discharge technique does not involve adsorption/desorption of gases, the arc discharge ionization gas sensor displays a fast response and is not limited by considerations of reversibility.
The following specific examples are presented for illustration of the preferred embodiments and should not be considered limiting on the scope of the invention. In a first example, the gas sensor schematically shown in
In a second example, the ionization arc discharge gas sensor having a nanotube anode was used to detect or determine the identity of several gas species, such as helium, argon, nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide, ammonia and air. The sensor was placed in an environmental chamber with electrical feed-through, and air was pumped out of the chamber to establish a high vacuum (10−4 torr). The gas to be identified was then released in a controlled fashion. Breakdown data were recorded over a wide range of gas concentrations (10−7 to 10−1 mol per liter).
In a third example, tests were conducted at reduced pressures to illustrate the effect of gas concentration on the results provided by the sensor.
In order to correlate the measured breakdown voltage and current discharge with particular gas species and concentrations, respectively, the sensor may be calibrated against a known gas species and/or against a known concentration in the actual sensor or in a reference sensor. For example, known gas species having known gas concentrations are provided into a reference sensor and the reference breakdown voltage and discharge current are recorded and stored in written form or electronically, such as in a computer memory or computer readable media. This data from the reference sensor is then provided to a computer, a processor circuit and/or a written chart that is to be used with any number of identical production sensors. When the breakdown voltage and/or a current discharge is measured in any of the production sensors for a given gas analyte, this measured voltage and/or current are compared to the respective reference voltage and/or current by a computer, processor circuit or the human operator of the sensor to determine the species and/or concentration of the gas analyte.
The breakdown process described above propagates through the formation of a positive or negative corona, depending on whether the nanotube film is configured as the anode or the cathode. For the experiments with the MWNT film as anode, the breakdown propagation mechanism is via the formation of a positive corona. The present inventors also conducted experiments in air with the MWNT film as cathode (negative corona). The tests indicate that the voltage at which breakdown is initiated is similar for both positive (350 V) and negative (330 V) corona. However, in negative corona, the breakdown voltage decreases to a lower value (˜280V) once breakdown is established. Without wishing to be bound by a particular theory, the present inventors believe that this effect occurs because once ionization is initiated in a negative corona, free electrons are repelled away from nanotube tips into the surrounding gas, triggering secondary ionizations that enable a self-propagating electron avalanche (a conducting path) to form at a lower electric field. Thus, forming the nanotubes on the anode is preferred (but not required) to forming nanotubes on the cathode, such as the nanotubes formed on a tip cathode in the sensor of Li et al., because it apparently reduces the damage to the nanotubes from the avalanche and provides a more accurate result.
The breakdown voltage was found to become lower as the inter electrode spacing was reduced. This is expected, as reducing the electrode separation increases the electric field in the gap.
The nanotube arc discharge or ionization sensor can be used to monitor gas mixtures without or without the direct use of a chromatography arrangement. In contrast, prior art ionization sensors, such as photo-ionization detectors (PID), flame-ionization detectors (FD) or electron-capture detectors (ECD) are not suitable for direct sensing of gas mixtures. These prior art detectors work in conjunction with a gas-chromatography set-up that separates the mixture into distinct bands that can then be qualitatively and quantitatively analyzed.
The fourth specific example illustrates the use of the nanotube ionization sensor to determine the species and/or concentration of analyte gas in a gas mixture.
The nanotube ionization sensor can also be used in combination with a gas separation device, such as a gas chromatography device (i.e., as a detector in gas chromatographs), where sufficiently large analyte concentrations are available. The gas separation device is used to separate gases in a mixture according to the gas species and then to provide the different gas species into the sensor sequentially.
The fifth specific example illustrates the use and sensitivity range of a nanotube-chromatography sensor, using a simulated gas-chromatography test with He chosen as the mobile phase. The results indicate that, with appropriate design of the chromatography arrangement, including choice of mobile phase, stationary phase and process parameters, the sensor may be used for detection of analytes in the low p.p.m. range (about 25 p.p.m.). Compact, low-power nanotube ionization detectors coupled to miniature separation columns provide field-portable gas chromatographs that could be used during emergency response and counter-terrorism situations that require definitive identification of contaminants in near real-time.
During gas chromatography separation, the gas sample is transported through a separation column using an inert gas called the mobile phase. The separation columns are typically fused silica open tubular columns that can be tightly wound into coils for compactness and are designed to separate the target analyte by using a stationary phase that is coated to the inside of the chromatography column. Other suitable column materials and designs can also be used. The function of the mobile phase is to sweep the analyte mixture through the length of the column. Therefore, post-separation, the target will be in a mixture with the mobile phase. To simulate such an environment, the present inventors added trace amounts of CO2 and O2 in an inert, helium ambient maintained at a partial pressure of 16 torr. Helium was selected as the inert mobile phase since it has a very low breakdown voltage (about 160 V) and is therefore not expected to impede the breakdown of the target.
These results indicate that the nanotube ionization detector may replace traditional ionization detectors (such as PID, FID or ECD) in a conventional gas-chromatography architecture. In fact, the nanotube ionization detector provides several advantages over the FID, PID or ECD detectors that are routinely used in chromatography sensors. FID has poor selectivity and requires bulky and hazardous hydrogen storage tanks during operation, PID has a better selectivity but is limited to a small range of analytes, and ECD is hazardous because it contains radioactive electron emitters. In contrast, the nanotube sensor is compact, safe to use and requires low power to operate. Since every gas has a characteristic breakdown electric field, a gas chromatograph with the nanotube ionization detector could potentially be applied to a broad range of analytes with good selectivity, as illustrated in
In a second embodiment of the present invention, the arc discharge or ionization gas sensor contains a single walled nanotube (SWNT) film electrode instead of a MWNT film electrode. The gas sensor with a MWNT electrode of the first embodiment can be used to detect the identity of an unknown gas and determine its concentration. However the voltage inputs needed to enable gas breakdown are in the range of 150-350 V. In order to provide battery-powered operation, it is preferred, but not required to bring the device operating voltages down to below 100 V. To achieve an ionization sensor operating at voltages below 100 V, a SWNT film is used as an anode or cathode electrode. The anode SWNT electrode is preferred.
SWNTs have much smaller diameters (about 0.5 to about 1 nm) than MWNTs (about 25 to 30 nm). Thus, the electric field in the vicinity of SWNT tips is expected to be far greater than in the vicinity MWNT tips because of the smaller dimensions (i.e., diameters) of the SWNTs. At a particular applied voltage, the electric field of carbon nanotube of similar length depends on the curvature of the nanotube, with over 30 times field enhancement predicted for SWNTs compared to MWNTs.
While it is difficult to grow vertically oriented SWNTs, horizontal networks of SWNTs can be grown between pre-patterned, nanotube template material locations on a substrate which does not facilitate SWNT growth. A template material is any material on which aligned nanotubes, such as SWNTs, grow preferentially, such as by CVD growth, compared to the substrate material. For example, the template material may comprise a metal, such as gold, deposited on silicon features or patterns (i.e. a silicon substrate or layer features or patterns).
In a third embodiment of the present invention, the ionization or arc discharge nanotube gas sensor 1 is located in a system 100, where the sensor 1 is located in an ionization micro-chamber 101, as shown in
The micro-chamber 113 preferably comprises joined upper 117 and lower 119 portions with the gas testing volume 11 enclosed between the upper and lower portions. The upper and lower portions may comprise the same or different materials. For example, the upper portion may comprise a glass, plastic or ceramic plate with inlet and outlet ports. Preferably, the upper portion 117 comprises a photosensitive glass plate. A metal electrode 7, such as an Al layer is formed on the bottom surface of this upper portion facing the testing volume 11.
The lower portion 119 preferably comprises a semiconductor substrate 6. The upper surface of the substrate 11 contains a gold electrode 5, such as the anode electrode, with nanotubes 3 deposited thereon and extending into the testing volume. The inter-electrode gap (i.e., the testing volume) 11 is controlled by the thickness of the spacer 9 between the upper and lower portions. The upper and lower portions are preferably fabricated separately on two wafers or substrates that are bonded at the end.
For example, this sensor may be used to detect flammable gases. A very small quantity of the analyte gas or gas mixture is injected, isolated and tested in an ionization micro-chamber. All flammable species require a certain minimum concentration threshold of oxygen without which combustion cannot occur and the required oxygen concentration may not be available in the micro-chamber. Even if the flammable specie ignites, the control volume is limited to a very small test sample and this eliminates any safety concerns associated with testing of the flammable specie. Thus, the very small volume is a volume of an ignited flammable species that poses no safety problems. An exemplary volume is a volume of 10 to 50 nanoliters, such as 25 nanoliters for a 500 μm×500 μm×100 μm ionization micro-chamber.
The ionization micro-chamber is advantageous for several reasons. First, testing a small volume of gas improves fidelity and repeatability of results. Second, due to smaller control volume, the settling time and mixture diffusivity is better. Third, the ionization micro-chamber lends itself to system miniaturization. The device may be the size of a chip that includes the micro-chamber coupled to a controller that performs the impulse voltage scan and continuously monitors the current discharge responses. Thus, the entire sensor may comprise an integrated circuit, with the electronics provided into silicon or other semiconductor material used to form the micro-chamber.
Preferably, the ionization micro-chamber system is a MEMS (micro-electro-mechanical system) that is made by microfabrication techniques, which include thin film deposition and photo exposure patterning (such as etching of materials using an overlying photoresist mask formed by selective exposure and patterning, or etching selectively exposed regions in a photosensitive material). While semiconductor materials may be used to make the micro-chamber, non-semiconductor materials, such as glass, plastic, ceramic or quartz may be used instead of or in combination with semiconductor materials to fabricate the micro-chamber.
Custom microfabrication allows for flexibility in design, while miniaturization offers the opportunity to develop small-volume chambers (e.g. 25 nanoliters for a 500 μm×500 μm×100 μm chamber) with fast response time. Any suitable design with different chamber size, electrode size, electrode material and inter-electrode distance may be used. The MEMS microfabrication steps used to form the CNT-silicon-glass ionization micro-chamber are shown in
A metallic electrode layer such as an Al or other metal or metal alloy layer, is deposited by any suitable method, such as by electron beam evaporation, on an upper substrate 121, such as a photosensitive glass substrate. The electrode layer is then patterned by any suitable method, such as by forming a photoresist mask on the electrode layer and wet etching the exposed regions of the electrode layer or by a lift off method, to form the upper electrode 7 of the sensor, as shown in
As shown in
As shown in
As shown in
In the final step shown in
As discussed above, the gas sensors of the preferred embodiments of the present invention provide very high non-linear electric fields near nanotube tips. The electric field in vicinity of the nanotube tips can be represented as E=V/R, where V is the applied voltage and R is the nanotube tip curvature. The extremely small tip curvature of nanotubes (about 15 nm for MWNTs and about 0.5 to about 1 nm for SWNTs) provides the high non-linear electric fields. This hastens the breakdown process due to formation of a “corona” or conducting filament of highly ionized gas that surrounds the nanotube tips. This promotes the formation of a powerful electron avalanche or plasma streamer that bridges the gap between the electrodes and allows for a self-sustaining inter-electrode arc discharge to be created at relatively low voltages. Lowering the device voltage is advantageous because it increases the safety of operation of the gas sensor and enables battery-powered operation. Battery power operation allows compact, affordable nano-electronic sensor development.
The gas sensor may identify the analyte gas species by monitoring the voltage at which the breakdown occurs and identify the analyte gas concentration by monitoring the self-sustaining discharge current. Since all gases display a characteristic breakdown response, a broad range of gases, including non-flammable and inert gases, such as Ar, can be detected, as opposed to conductivity measurements in some prior art gas sensors that are limited to gas species that exhibit adsorption and charge transfer with nanotubes. Since the method of operation of the gas sensor does not involve adsorption/desorption of gas species, the sensor displays fast response time and is not limited by considerations of reversibility. The sensor may also be used to determine the analyte gas species and/or concentration in gas mixtures by limiting the volume of gas affected by the ionization. This ensures that the gas being sensed does not get replenished as molecules breakdown and are ionized, allowing for continued sensing at higher voltages to detect the next gas in the mixture.
From the foregoing description, one skilled in the art can easily ascertain the essential characteristics of this invention, and without departing from the spirit and scope thereof, can male various changes and modifications of the invention to adapt it to various usages and conditions without undue experimentation. All patents, patent applications and publications cited herein are incorporated by reference in their entirety.
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/435,041, filed Dec. 20, 2002, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US03/40665 | 12/19/2003 | WO | 6/16/2006 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60435041 | Dec 2002 | US |