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UV-Assisted Alcohol Sensors using Gallium Nitride Nanowires Functionalized with Zinc Oxide and Tin Dioxide Nanoparticles

Posted on:2013-03-13Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The George Washington UniversityCandidate:Bajpai, RituFull Text:PDF
GTID:1451390008985909Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
The motivation behind this work has been to address two of the most challenging issues posed to semiconductor gas sensors--- tuning the device selectivity and sensitivity to a wide variety of gases. In a chemiresistor type nanowire sensor, the sensitivity and selectivity depend on the interaction of different chemical analytes with the nanowire surface. Constrained by the surface properties of the nanowire material, most nanowire sensors can detect only specific type of analytes. In order to make a nano-sensor array for a wide range of analytes, there is a need to tune the device sensitivity and selectivity towards different chemicals. Employing the inherent advantages of nanostructure based sensing such as large surface area, miniature size, low power consumption, and nmol/mol (ppb) sensitivity, an attempt has been made to propose a device with tunable selectivity and sensitivity.;The idea proposed in this work is to functionalize GaN nanowires which have relatively inactive surface properties (i.e., with no chemiresistive sensitivity to different classes of organic vapors), with analyte dependent active metal oxides. The selectivity of the sensor devices is controlled independent of the surface properties of the nanowire itself. It is the surface properties of the functionalizing metal oxides which determine the selectivity of these sensors. Further facilitated by the proposed fabrication technique, these sensors can be easily tuned to detect different gases. The prototype developed in this work is that of a UV assisted alcohol sensor using GaN nanowires functionalized with ZnO and SnO2 nanoparticles.;As opposed to the widely demonstrated metal oxide based sensors assisted by elevated temperature, the operation of photoconductive semiconductor sensor devices such as those fabricated in this work, can also be assisted by UV illumination at room temperature. Temperature assisted sensing requires an integrated on-chip heater, which could impose constraints on the device fabrication process conditions. Additionally, light assisted sensing can be employed to tailor device response towards an analyte as demonstrated in this work. Therefore, there are two control knobs available for these sensor devices which are independent of the nanowire surface properties: i) sensor selectivity, regulated by the nanoparticle material selection ii) percentage response, tuned by the intensity of the incident light. Due to the small magnitude of device operating current and sensor activation at low illumination intensity (375 nW/cm2 at 365 nm wavelength has been used in this work), these sensors have low power consumption which makes them suitable for portable battery assisted operation.;A fabrication recipe for freely suspended two-terminal nanowire devices has been developed. The deposition of nanoparticles was performed using the sputter deposition technique. A change in device current was observed when the device was exposed to alcohol vapors (methanol, ethanol, propanol, and butanol) at room temperature under 215 nm--400 nm UV illumination at 365 nm wavelength. The sensor reproducibly responded to a wide range of alcohol vapor concentrations, from 5000 mumol/mol (ppm) down to 200 nmol/mol (ppb) in air. Notably, the devices show low sensitivity to acetone and hexane, which allows them to selectively detect the alcohol vapors mixed with these two common volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The sensor response was not observed without UV excitation.;To make a simplified quantitative and qualitative study of the sensitivity variation with variation of light intensity, the behavior of ZnO nanowire sensor devices was investigated in addition to the hybrid metal-oxide nanoparticle/GaN nanowire devices. With an increase in the light intensity, a corresponding increase in the device sensitivity was observed.;In addition to the proposed sensor fabrication technique being a highly suitable candidate for making nano-sensor arrays for detection of a wide range of gases, the alcohol sensors fabricated in this work have many practical applications such as monitoring air quality, and testing the blood alcohol content (BAC) for impaired drivers.
Keywords/Search Tags:Sensor, Alcohol, Work, Nanowire, Assisted, Surface properties, Device, Sensitivity
PDF Full Text Request
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