TY - JOUR
T1 - Double-Step Modulation of the Pulse-Driven Mode for a High-Performance SnO2Micro Gas Sensor
T2 - Designing the Particle Surface via a Rapid Preheating Process
AU - Suematsu, Koichi
AU - Hiroyama, Yuki
AU - Harano, Wataru
AU - Mizukami, Wataru
AU - Watanabe, Ken
AU - Shimanoe, Kengo
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was partially supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI) (JP17K17941, JP19K15659, and JP19H02437). We thank Figaro Engineering Inc. for partial support and providing the MEMS-type microsensor device. The DFT calculations were performed using the computational facilities in the Research Institute for Information Technology (RIIT) at Kyushu University, Japan. We would like to thank Editage ( www.editage.com ) for English language editing.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2020/11/25
Y1 - 2020/11/25
N2 - To improve the sensing properties toward volatile organic compound gases, a preheating process was introduced in a miniature pulse-driven semiconductor gas sensor, using SnO2 nanoparticles. The miniature sensor went through a short preheating span at a high temperature before being cooled and then experienced a measurement span under heating; this is the double-pulse-driven mode. This operating profile resulted in the modification of the surface conditions of naked SnO2 nanoparticles to facilitate the adsorption of O2- and ethanol-based adsorbates. Temperature-programmed reaction measurement results show that ethanol gas was adsorbed onto the SnO2 surface at 30 °C, and the adsorption amount of ethanol and its byproducts was increased after ethanol exposure at high temperatures followed by cooling. The electrical resistance of the sensor in synthetic air increased as the preheating temperature increased. The sensor responses, Si and Se, to 1 ppm ethanol at 250 °C were enhanced by introducing the preheating process; Si values at 250 °C with and without preheating at 300 °C are 40 and 15, respectively. The obtained improvements were attributed to an increase in O2- adsorption onto the SnO2 surface during the preheating phase. During the cooling phases, the adsorption of ethanol-based molecules onto the SnO2 surface and their condensation in the sensing layer contributed to the enhanced performance. In addition, the double-pulse-driven mode improves the recovery speed in the electrical resistance after gas detection. These improvements made in the sensing properties of the double-pulse-driven semiconductor gas sensors provide desirable advantages for healthcare and medical devices.
AB - To improve the sensing properties toward volatile organic compound gases, a preheating process was introduced in a miniature pulse-driven semiconductor gas sensor, using SnO2 nanoparticles. The miniature sensor went through a short preheating span at a high temperature before being cooled and then experienced a measurement span under heating; this is the double-pulse-driven mode. This operating profile resulted in the modification of the surface conditions of naked SnO2 nanoparticles to facilitate the adsorption of O2- and ethanol-based adsorbates. Temperature-programmed reaction measurement results show that ethanol gas was adsorbed onto the SnO2 surface at 30 °C, and the adsorption amount of ethanol and its byproducts was increased after ethanol exposure at high temperatures followed by cooling. The electrical resistance of the sensor in synthetic air increased as the preheating temperature increased. The sensor responses, Si and Se, to 1 ppm ethanol at 250 °C were enhanced by introducing the preheating process; Si values at 250 °C with and without preheating at 300 °C are 40 and 15, respectively. The obtained improvements were attributed to an increase in O2- adsorption onto the SnO2 surface during the preheating phase. During the cooling phases, the adsorption of ethanol-based molecules onto the SnO2 surface and their condensation in the sensing layer contributed to the enhanced performance. In addition, the double-pulse-driven mode improves the recovery speed in the electrical resistance after gas detection. These improvements made in the sensing properties of the double-pulse-driven semiconductor gas sensors provide desirable advantages for healthcare and medical devices.
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U2 - 10.1021/acssensors.0c01365
DO - 10.1021/acssensors.0c01365
M3 - Article
C2 - 32962335
AN - SCOPUS:85096884245
SN - 2379-3694
VL - 5
SP - 3449
EP - 3456
JO - ACS Sensors
JF - ACS Sensors
IS - 11
ER -