Ethanol microsensors with a readout circuit manufactured using the CMOS-MEMS technique

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Abstract

The design and fabrication of an ethanol microsensor integrated with a readout circuit on-a-chip using the complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS)-microelectro -mechanical system (MEMS) technique are investigated. The ethanol sensor is made up of a heater, a sensitive film and interdigitated electrodes. The sensitive film is tin dioxide that is prepared by the sol-gel method. The heater is located under the interdigitated electrodes, and the sensitive film is coated on the interdigitated electrodes. The sensitive film needs a working temperature of 220 °C. The heater is employed to provide the working temperature of sensitive film. The sensor generates a change in capacitance when the sensitive film senses ethanol gas. A readout circuit is used to convert the capacitance variation of the sensor into the output frequency. Experiments show that the sensitivity of the ethanol sensor is 0.9 MHz/ppm.

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Yang, M. Z., & Dai, C. L. (2015). Ethanol microsensors with a readout circuit manufactured using the CMOS-MEMS technique. Sensors (Switzerland), 15(1), 1623–1634. https://doi.org/10.3390/s150101623

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