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NIST Chemical Sensor Technology

Today, portable devices for detecting toxic airborne chemicals are largely limited to specialized equipment designed for use by the military or by first responders to chemical spills. In the event of an attack involving toxic chemical agents—such as the recent use of sarin gas in a Tokyo subway station—such portable detectors typically would not arrive on the scene until after victims already have been harmed by the gas.

Infrared Image of Microheater Heating Up

Infrared Image of Microheater
Heating Up

Chemical Sensor Semiconductor Circuit

NIST Chemical Sensor Semiconductor Circuit with Four Microheaters

 

NIST is currently conducting research on a class of microsensors that have the potential to serve as a cost-effective early warning system for the presence of toxic gases. This same basic technological approach also may be applicable to detection of vapors from explosive materials. The NIST devices use an array of tiny microhotplates in conjunction with thin metallized films such as tin, titanium, or zinc oxides. Both the hotplates and sensing films are incorporated into an integrated circuit device that can be fabricated with standard CMOS methods. This means the miniature detectors can be designed and produced inexpensively with digital electronic processing circuits built in.

A key advantage of this technology is that an array of hotplates with various types of films can be programmed to cycle through specific temperatures. This creates a sensitive surface for detecting ambient chemicals. If a specific chemical of interest is present, the resistance of the device changes in a reproducible way. This change in resistance with different temperatures produces a type of “signature” for specific chemicals that can be matched up against a library of chemical signatures to identify both the type and concentration of the gas in the ambient air. NIST already has demonstrated this ability for a variety of oxygenated hydrocarbons, such as solvents, methanol, and ethanol.

By changing the way the metal oxide films are grown, NIST researchers have produced films with different grain sizes that react in different ways to specific chemicals. This matrix of responses to an array of sensors programmed to cycle through specific temperatures with different microstructures is what allows the devices to produce a unique chemical signature.

Research and Development

With funding from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency, NIST researchers have demonstrated that simulates of sulfur-mustard compounds and nerve agents (sarin, VX, etc.) can be detected at or significantly below the 1-part-per-million level in laboratory testing. Preliminary testing at the Army’s Edgewood Arsenal has confirmed that this sensitivity is feasible with actual chemical warfare agents. Further research is under way to demonstrate that the presence of each agent will produce unique temperature-dependent response signatures.

Recent experiments with integrated circuits containing the microhotplate sensors have shown sensitivity to test chemicals—methanol, ethanol, and acetone—at the 100-parts-per-billion level. These chips were made at a chip “foundry” with CMOS-compatible technology, demonstrating that the current research design, at least, can be inexpensively manufactured. By integrating the sensors onto the same semiconductor substrate as the electronic circuitry, the signal-to-noise ratio for the sensors is enhanced significantly. Such integration also makes it possible to include self-calibrating circuits and chemical recognition processors on the same chip.

In the explosives detection area, following initial feasibility experiments at NIST, a research license was issued to the University of Massachusetts/Lowell. The UMASS team now is investigating whether minute quantities of vapors from explosive materials can be detected reliably using microhotplate platforms.

In addition, NIST chemists have extensive experience in both the forensic detection of gunpowder and other explosive residues and in the development of “lab on a chip” techniques using microfluidic samples. These capabilities have the potential to be combined in a single integrated circuit with the microhotplate sensors in the future for multipurpose detection of both chemical and biological threats.

The micromachined platforms used in the microsensors are patented and have been refined over the last decade. Prototype sensors are now produced on a regular basis.

Further research is needed to determine selectivity for a variety of toxic agents. In addition, issues such as determining the rate of false positives and robustness of the sensors with repeated use need further study.

NIST is interested in partnering with a manufacturer to continue the needed scientific and engineering work required to move this technology from the research lab to the marketplace. Ultimately, the goal is to license the technology for production of inexpensive, multi-array detectors that could be deployed in a wide range of settings from subway stations to concert halls, from factories to office buildings. Just as a network of heat or smoke detectors warns occupants of a potential fire, these chemical sensors then could warn occupants of potentially toxic agents in the air.

The ability to tune the sensors to specific chemicals of interest also has attracted interest from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration for monitoring the safety of the air inside spacecraft and for planetary environmental monitoring. The Department of Energy has expressed interest in the technology for monitoring levels of hazardous organic chemicals used in the disposal of radioactive waste.

Partial list of relevant patents:

Temperature-controlled Micromachined Arrays for Chemical Sensor Fabrication and Operation, Patent # 5,345,213.

Micro-hotplate Devices and Methods for Their Fabrication, Patent # 5,464,966.

Micron-scale Differential Calorimeter on a Chip, Patent # 6,079,873.

Method for Operating a Sensor to Differentiate Between Analytes in a Sample, Patent # 6,095,681.

For further information contact the NIST Office of Technology Partnerships, (301) 975-3084.


Date created: 3/7/03
Last updated: 8/17/05
Contact: inquiries@nist.gov

 

 

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