TY - JOUR
T1 - A fast-response/recovery ZnO hierarchical nanostructure based gas sensor with ultra-high room-temperature output response
AU - Pan, Xiaofang
AU - Zhao, Xiaojin
AU - Chen, Jiaqi
AU - Bermak, Amine
AU - Fan, Zhiyong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
PY - 2015/1
Y1 - 2015/1
N2 - In this paper, a ZnO hierarchical nanostructure based gas sensor is presented. The proposed implementation features short response/recovery time and ultra-high output response at room temperature (RT). In order to take the advantages of complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process in terms of miniaturization and cost-effectiveness, a novel fabrication recipe, consisting of CMOS-compatible techniques, is proposed to form a patterned triple-layer metal, which functions as both interconnection electrodes and catalyst for our reported ZnO hierarchical nanostructure. This enables rapid and local growth of ZnO hierarchical nanostructure directly on a single silicon chip. Reported peak RT output response of 32 (20 ppm NO2) provides a significant 28-fold improvement over the traditional widely adopted nanowire-based gas sensor. Meanwhile, a time efficient gas sensor is also validated by the presented temporal performance with a response and recovery time of 72 s and 69 s, respectively. In addition, compared with the previously demonstrated gas sensors operating at 200-300 °C, the proposed RT sensing completely removes the power-hungry heater and eliminates the related thermal reliability issues. Moreover, the demonstrated process flow well addresses the challenging issues of the traditional mainstream "drop-cast" method, including poor yield, non-uniformity of device performance and low efficiency caused by inevitable manual microscope inspection.
AB - In this paper, a ZnO hierarchical nanostructure based gas sensor is presented. The proposed implementation features short response/recovery time and ultra-high output response at room temperature (RT). In order to take the advantages of complementary-metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) process in terms of miniaturization and cost-effectiveness, a novel fabrication recipe, consisting of CMOS-compatible techniques, is proposed to form a patterned triple-layer metal, which functions as both interconnection electrodes and catalyst for our reported ZnO hierarchical nanostructure. This enables rapid and local growth of ZnO hierarchical nanostructure directly on a single silicon chip. Reported peak RT output response of 32 (20 ppm NO2) provides a significant 28-fold improvement over the traditional widely adopted nanowire-based gas sensor. Meanwhile, a time efficient gas sensor is also validated by the presented temporal performance with a response and recovery time of 72 s and 69 s, respectively. In addition, compared with the previously demonstrated gas sensors operating at 200-300 °C, the proposed RT sensing completely removes the power-hungry heater and eliminates the related thermal reliability issues. Moreover, the demonstrated process flow well addresses the challenging issues of the traditional mainstream "drop-cast" method, including poor yield, non-uniformity of device performance and low efficiency caused by inevitable manual microscope inspection.
KW - CMOS gas sensor
KW - Hierarchical nanostructure
KW - Room-temperature gas sensing
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84911437962&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.snb.2014.08.089
DO - 10.1016/j.snb.2014.08.089
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84911437962
SN - 0925-4005
VL - 206
SP - 764
EP - 771
JO - Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical
JF - Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical
ER -