1. Amine-Functionalized Capacitive Carbon Dioxide Sensor Performance as a Function of Temperature and Sensing Film Thickness.
- Author
-
Kim, Choongsoon, Brown, Devin, Kim, Min-gu, Taylor, William P., Wong, Harianto, and Brand, Oliver
- Abstract
This paper systematically investigates sensor performance of amine-functionalized, microfabricated capacitive carbon dioxide (CO2) sensors as a function of sensor temperature and sensing film thickness. The sensor comprises a 1 mm by 1 mm interdigitated electrode structure with $2~\mu \text{m}$ line width and $2~\mu \text{m}$ line spacing, surrounded by a resistive temperature sensor and a resistive heater. A mixture of 3-aminopropyltrimethoxysilane and propyltrimethoxysilane was spray-coated onto the sensors and the CO2 response was measured in a gas mixing system. Using a 100 nm thick sensing film, a maximum sensor sensitivity of −1.2%/1,000ppm CO2 concentration was obtained with response times of 5-10 minutes at a sensor temperature of 85°C. The sensor sensitivity decreases for higher and lower temperatures while the sensor response time monotonically decreases with increasing sensor temperature. Thicker sensing films improve sensor sensitivity at the expense of a longer response time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF