Monday, September 11, 2017

Comparison of both MEMS Thermal Conductivity CO2 Sensors
And Non-dispersive Infrared CO2 Sensors

Xiang Zheng Tu

 

A major hazardous gas present in the atmosphere which creates various adverse effects to human is carbon dioxide (CO2). Measurement of CO2 gas using CO2 sensor will help to monitor its presence and indicate us above dangerous limits to prevent adversities. In a modern ventilation system CO2 sensors used as indoor air quality indicators help to ensure a fresh outside air supply to building occupants while simultaneously optimizing energy consumption. For such systems it has been recommended: CO2 sensors shall be certified by the manufacturer to be accurate within plus or minus 75 ppm at a 600 and 1000 ppm concentration. Carbon dioxide air-conditioning systems have been installed in cars. In these applications the CO2 leakage detection range is 0-50.000 ppm with a resolution of 10% while the comfort range is 0-5.000 ppm with a resolution of 200 ppm.

A non-dispersive infrared (NDIR) CO2 sensor is shown in the above first figure. The NDIR sensor comprises an infrared source, a sample cell, an optical filter and a detector system. The infrared source directs waves of light through the cell filled with air containing CO2 toward the filter and then detector which measures the amount of the light that hits it. As the light passes through the cell, any gas molecules that are the same size as the wavelength of the light absorb the light only, while letting other wavelengths of the light pass through. Next, the remaining light hits the filter that absorbs every wavelength of light except the exact wavelength absorbed by CO2. Finally, the detector reads the amount of light that was not absorbed by the CO2 molecules or the optical filter.
The difference between the amount of light radiated by the source and the amount of the light received by the detector is measured. The difference is proportional to the number of CO2 molecules in the air inside the cell.

The advantages of the non-dispersive infrared (NDIR) CO2 sensors are selective, sensitive, non contact and reliable. At present time this technology is accepted as a state-of-the-art. But it still has some serious problems such as inherently expensive (at least two components), large size, requiring drift compensation and complex packaging.
So many efforts have been made regarding more miniaturization and lower system costs compared to the non-dispersive infrared CO2 sensors.

POSIFA Microsystems Company announces a MEMS thermal conductivity CO2 sensor.
The sensor integrates all CO2 sensing components in a single silicon microstructure with a micro-hot-bridge, which is not like the non-dispersive infrared CO2 sensor which is assembled with at least 4 separated components. In additional the micro-hot-bridge the sensor further contains a resistor, a cavity, and a thermopile with its hot junctions near the resistor and cold junctions extending to the silicon frame along the bridge supporting beams.  

The thermal conductivity CO2 sensor performs a measurement as follows. By applying a voltage to the resistor on the micro-hot-bridge of the sensor, the resistor is heated up and becomes a “hot source”. The cavity is open to the atmosphere and filled with air containing a certain amount of CO2 gas or air mixture. The air mixture transfers a quantity of heat from the hot source to the cold bottom of the cavity via the air mixture. The quantity of heat is measured by the thermopile. The changes in the thermal conductivity of the air mixture can be detected by measuring the changes of the output Seebeck voltage of the thermopile. With the measured thermal conductivity of the air mixture the concentration of the CO2 in the air can be calculated by a humidity compensation algorithm which is based on the measurement results using the same sensor operated at two different temperatures.

Compared with the non-dispersive infrared CO2 sensors, the thermal conductivity CO2 sensors possess many advantages such as:
  • Size reduced to a single silicon chip,
  • Milliwatts grade power consumption,
  • Milliseconds grade response times,
  • Low cost, and
  • Able to identify different gases of a gas mixture.
 

It is not be surprised for the last advantage. The thermal conductivities of gases always change with temperature. As shown in the above second figure, the thermal conductivities of gases CH4, C2H6, N2 and CO2 increase slight-non-linearly with temperature. Based on this inherent character of the gases distinguishing single components of a gas mixture can be realized by modulating operation temperature of a thermal conductivity sensor.

Hear, as a gas mixture of Air, CO2 and humidity (water vapor) is measured as a gas mixture. The temperature modulation is conducted by applying heating voltages V1 and V2 with V2 higher than V1. The measured output signals of the thermopile are Y1 and Y2 respectively. Then two binary linear equations can be obtained as

Y1 = b01 + b11 NCO2 + b12 Nwater vapor       (1)

Y2 = b02 + b21 NCO2 + b22 Nwater vapor        (2)

Where Y1 and Y2 are the output of the thermopile, NCO2 and Nwater vapor  are the volume percentage of CO2 and humidity respectively, b01, b02, b11, b12, b02, b21 and b22 are constants determined by calibration tests. The volume Nair of Air is found by meeting the equation as

Nair + NCO2 + Nwater vapor = 1                   (3)

With the measured Y1, Y2 and the known b01, b02, b11, b12, b02, b21 and b22, NCO2, and Nwater can be found by solving the equations (1), (2) and (3).


All these advantages offer a high potential for mass markets. The most compact thermal conductivity CO2 sensors have been developed for human breath analysis that will focus on enabling low cost applications but without compromising on accuracy.

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