Every gas (e.g. CO2) absorbs IR-radiation at
individual gas specific IR-wavelengths. Non-dispersive infrared NDIR gas sensors exploit this property for gas monitoring. Such sensors are used in
various applications, e.g. for control of air quality in office buildings or
cars.
This is a big market for low cost sensors. A NDIR sensor
consists basically of three components: an IR-emitter, a chamber containing the
sample gas, and an IR-detector with a filter for the observed wavelength.
Commercially available systems use broadband IR-emitters (e.g.: micro-lamps) in
combination with thermopile or pyroelectric detectors fabricated with a
narrowband gas-specific IR-filter, e.g., an interference filter.
We devised a concept for a simple and cost-effective
NDIR-gas sensor based on two non-symmetric Fabry-Perot absorberstructures as
IR-emitter and as IR-detector where no additional interference filter is
needed. The presented sensor combines thin layer technology with optical
sensing techniques.
The system was first analyzed using ray tracing models based
on a Monte Carlo method in order to model the response function of the system's
sample chamber. For our results, the sample gas is CO2 where the
major absorption is centered around 4.26μm.
沒有留言:
張貼留言