202504291345
- Source: [[ @potyrailo2020 Extraordinary performance of semiconducting metal oxide gas sensors using dielectric excitation ]]
- Tags: #gas-sensor #detection #MOX
In order to overcome the Limitations of chemiresistive gas sensors , instead of measuring the resistance, the authors propose to measure the impedance of the sensitive layer.
It is important to keep in mind that there's a fenomenological power-law rule regarding the resistivity of the sensing layer:
$$ R = R_0(1 + K_\textrm{gas}[\textrm{gas}])^{-\beta} $$ Where $K_{\textrm{gas}}$ is the sensitivity to a specific gas, while $\beta$ depends on different factors, such as: 1. The nature of the measured gas 2. The type of sensing material, including the grain size, grain surface-to-volume ratio, types of dopants 3. The geometry and material of the electrodes of the sensing element.
Using the following circuit diagram for the sensing measurement (IC: intergranular contacts, EC: electrode/particle contacts)
We can define (not sure where this is coming from):
$$ Z' = \frac{R}{1+(2\pi fCR)^2} $$ $$ Z'' = \frac{-R^2C2\pi f}{1+(2\pi fCR)^2} $$ The entire observation of the paper is that while resistance alone has a non-linear behaviour and saturates at relatively low concentrations of gas, $Z''$ shows a linear behavior in a wide range of parameters.
Interesting to remember: - The sensor used was TGS 2611 - ASIC: AD5933, ADuCM355
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