Integrated, Selective, Simultaneous Multigas Sensing Based on Nondispersive Infrared Spectroscopy-Type Photoacoustic Spectroscopy.
Gabriel Rodriguez GutierrezAlvaro Ortiz PerezStefan PalzerPublished in: ACS sensors (2023)
Most chemical sensing scenarios require the selective and simultaneous determination of the concentrations of multiple gas species. In order to enable large-scale monitoring, reliability, robustness, and the potential for integration and miniaturization are key parameters that next-generation sensing technologies must comply with. Due to their superior sensitivity and selectivity as compared to standard NDIR-type systems, photoacoustic NDIR-approaches offer a means for selective detection at much reduced system dimensions such that microintegration becomes feasible. This contribution presents an acoustic frequency multiplexing method to integrate sensing capabilities for the parallel analysis of multiple gases in a single device without loss in selectivity via sound frequency separation. The approach is demonstrated using mid-infrared light emitting diodes and a multigas photoacoustic detector to monitor some of the most important greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide and methane. The number of gas species the sensor concept is able to detect simultaneously can be expanded without increasing the size of the system or its complexity. Additionally, the results demonstrate that the integrated device features the same selectivity and sensitivity as the currently used single gas photoacoustic NDIR systems. Furthermore, the possibility of an extension to any number of gas species is argued.
Keyphrases
- carbon dioxide
- simultaneous determination
- fluorescence imaging
- room temperature
- liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry
- liquid chromatography
- tandem mass spectrometry
- climate change
- high resolution
- genetic diversity
- single molecule
- ultra high performance liquid chromatography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- ms ms
- label free