| Literature DB >> 26751450 |
Wen Wang1, Haoliang Hu2, Xinlu Liu3, Shitang He4, Yong Pan5, Caihong Zhang6, Chuan Dong7.
Abstract
A new room temperature supra-molecular cryptophane A (CrypA)-coated surface acoustic wave (SAW) sensor for sensing methane gas is presented. The sensor is composed of differential resonator-oscillators, a supra-molecular CrypA coated along the acoustic propagation path, and a frequency signal acquisition module (FSAM). A two-port SAW resonator configuration with low insertion loss, single resonation mode, and high quality factor was designed on a temperature-compensated ST-X quartz substrate, and as the feedback of the differntial oscillators. Prior to development, the coupling of modes (COM) simulation was conducted to predict the device performance. The supramolecular CrypA was synthesized from vanillyl alcohol using a double trimerisation method and deposited onto the SAW propagation path of the sensing resonators via different film deposition methods. Experiential results indicate the CrypA-coated sensor made using a dropping method exhibits higher sensor response compared to the unit prepared by the spinning approach because of the obviously larger surface roughness. Fast response and excellent repeatability were observed in gas sensing experiments, and the estimated detection limit and measured sensitivity are ~0.05% and ~204 Hz/%, respectively.Entities:
Keywords: cryptophane A; methane gas sensor; resonator-oscillator; room temperature; surface acoustic wave
Year: 2016 PMID: 26751450 PMCID: PMC4732106 DOI: 10.3390/s16010073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The schematic and working principle of the SAW-based methane gas sensor.
Design parameters for the SAW sensor chip.
| Parameters | Values | Parameters | Values |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operation frequency (MHz) | 300 | Wavelength (λ: μm) | 10.5 |
| IDT length (λ) | 41 | Gap between the reflectors and IDT (λ) | 0.75/0.5 |
| Reflector length (λ) | 300 | Length of the coating area (λ) | 150 |
| aperture (λ) | 200 | Gap between the IDT and coating area (λ) | 5 |
Figure 2The measured and simulated frequency response of the SAW resonator.
Figure 3The oscillation PCB for methane gas sensor.
Figure 4The measured frequency stabiltiy of the SAW oscillator.
Scheme 1Synthesis of CrypA.
Figure 51H-NMR spectrum of the synthesized CrypA.
Figure 6AFM characterization of CrypA coated by (a) Spin-coating; (b) Drop-coating.
Figure 7The gas chamber (a) and experimental set up (b) of the sensor system.
Figure 8Sensor response and repeatability testing towards 5% CH4 from the SAW sensor with different CrypA coating method. (a) Dropping-method; (b) Spinning-coating.
Figure 9Responses of CrypA based SAW sensor to (a) High CH4 concentrations and (b) Low CH4 concentration at room temperature.
Figure 10Frequency shifts of CrypA-coated SAW sensor vs. different concentrations of CH4.
Figure 11Frequency response of the SAW sensor to relative humidity.