Compact Mid-Infrared Gas Sensing Enabled by an All-Metamaterial Design

The miniaturization of mid-infrared optical gas sensors has great potential to make the "fingerprint region" between 2 and 10 μm accessible to a variety of cost-sensitive applications ranging from medical technology to atmospheric sensing. Here we demonstrate a gas sensor concept that achi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nano letters 2020-06, Vol.20 (6), p.4169-4176
Hauptverfasser: Lochbaum, Alexander, Dorodnyy, Alexander, Koch, Ueli, Koepfli, Stefan M, Volk, Sebastian, Fedoryshyn, Yuriy, Wood, Vanessa, Leuthold, Juerg
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The miniaturization of mid-infrared optical gas sensors has great potential to make the "fingerprint region" between 2 and 10 μm accessible to a variety of cost-sensitive applications ranging from medical technology to atmospheric sensing. Here we demonstrate a gas sensor concept that achieves a 30-fold reduction in absorption volume compared to conventional gas sensors by using plasmonic metamaterials as on-chip optical filters. Integrating metamaterials into both the emitter and the detector cascades their individual filter functions, yielding a narrowband spectral response tailored to the absorption band of interest, here CO . Simultaneously, the metamaterials' angle-independence is maintained, enabling an optically efficient, millimeter-scale cavity. With a CO sensitivity of 22.4 ± 0.5 ppm·Hz , the electrically driven prototype already performs at par with much larger commercial devices while consuming 80% less energy per measurement. The all-metamaterial sensing concept offers a path toward more compact and energy-efficient mid-infrared gas sensors without trade-offs in sensitivity or robustness.
ISSN:1530-6984
1530-6992
DOI:10.1021/acs.nanolett.0c00483