Sensors (Nov 2020)

A ppm Ethanol Sensor Based on Fabry–Perot Interferometric Surface Stress Transducer at Room Temperature

  • Toshiaki Takahashi,
  • Yong-Joon Choi,
  • Kazuaki Sawada,
  • Kazuhiro Takahashi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s20236868
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 23
p. 6868

Abstract

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Disease screening by exhaled breath diagnosis is less burdensome for patients, and various devices have been developed as promising diagnostic methods. We developed a microelectromechanical system (MEMS) optical interferometric surface stress sensor to detect volatile ethanol gas at room temperature (26~27 °C) with high sensitivity. A sub-micron air gap in the optical interferometric sensor reduces interference orders, leading to increased spectral response associated with nanomechanical deflection caused by ethanol adsorption. The sub-micron cavity was embedded in a substrate using a transfer technique of parylene-C nanosheet. The sensor with a 0.4 µm gap shows a linear stable reaction, with small standard deviations, even at low ethanol gas concentrations of 5–110 ppm and a reversible reaction to the gas concentration change. Furthermore, the possibility of detecting sub-ppm ethanol concentration by optimizing the diameter and thickness of the deformable membrane is suggested. Compared with conventional MEMS surface stress gas sensors, the proposed optical interferometric sensor demonstrated high-sensitivity gas detection with exceeding the detection limit by two orders of magnitude while reducing the sensing area.

Keywords