Sensors (Sep 2013)

Micro Ethanol Sensors with a Heater Fabricated Using the Commercial 0.18 μm CMOS Process

  • Wei-Zhen Liao,
  • Ching-Liang Dai,
  • Ming-Zhi Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s131012760
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10
pp. 12760 – 12770

Abstract

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The study investigates the fabrication and characterization of an ethanol microsensor equipped with a heater. The ethanol sensor is manufactured using the commercial 0.18 µm complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) process. The sensor consists of a sensitive film, a heater and interdigitated electrodes. The sensitive film is zinc oxide prepared by the sol-gel method, and it is coated on the interdigitated electrodes. The heater is located under the interdigitated electrodes, and it is used to supply a working temperature to the sensitive film. The sensor needs a post-processing step to remove the sacrificial oxide layer, and to coat zinc oxide on the interdigitated electrodes. When the sensitive film senses ethanol gas, the resistance of the sensor generates a change. An inverting amplifier circuit is utilized to convert the resistance variation of the sensor into the output voltage. Experiments show that the sensitivity of the ethanol sensor is 0.35 mV/ppm.

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