• DocumentCode
    1217364
  • Title

    Microfabricated preconcentrator-focuser for a microscale gas chromatograph

  • Author

    Tian, Wei-Cheng ; Pang, Stella W. ; Lu, Chia-Jung ; Zellers, Edward T.

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput. Sci., Univ. of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, USA
  • Volume
    12
  • Issue
    3
  • fYear
    2003
  • fDate
    6/1/2003 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    264
  • Lastpage
    272
  • Abstract
    The design, fabrication, and testing of a preconcentrator-focuser (PCF), consisting of a thick micromachined Si heater packed with a small quantity of a granular adsorbent material are described. The PCF is developed to capture and concentrate vapors for subsequent focused thermal desorption and analysis in a micro gas chromatograph. The microheater contains an array of high-aspect-ratio, etched-Si heating elements, 520 μm (h)×50 μm (w)×3000 μm (l), bounded by an annulus of Si and thermally isolated from the remaining substrate by an air gap. This structure is sandwiched between Pyrex glass plates with inlet/outlet ports that accept capillary tubes for sample flow and is sealed by anodic bonding (bottom) and rapidly annealed glass/metal/Si solder bonding (top). The large microheater surface area allows for high adsorption capacity and efficient, uniform thermal desorption of vapors captured on the adsorbent within the structure. The adsorbent consists of roughly spherical granules, ∼200 μm in diameter, of a high-surface-area, graphitized carbon. Key design considerations, fabrication technologies, and results of performance tests are presented with an emphasis on the thermal desorption characteristics of several representative volatile organic compounds as a function of volumetric flow rates and heating rates. Preconcentration factors as high as 5600 and desorbed peak widths as narrow as 0.8 s are achieved from 0.25-L samples of benzene at modest heating rates. The effects of operating variables on sensitivity, chromatographic resolution, and detection limits are assessed. Testing of this PCF with a micromachined separation column and integrated sensor array is discussed briefly.
  • Keywords
    adsorption; chromatography; desorption; gas sensors; heating elements; micromachining; microsensors; organic compounds; 3000 micron; 50 micron; 520 micron; Pyrex glass plates; Si; Si annulus; air gap; anodic bonding; capillary tubes; chromatographic resolution; design considerations; desorbed peak widths; detection limits; fabrication technologies; focused thermal desorption; granular adsorbent material; heating rates; high adsorption capacity; high-aspect-ratio etched-Si heating elements; high-surface-area graphitized carbon; inlet/outlet ports; integrated sensor array; microfabricated preconcentrator-focuser; microheater; microheater surface area; micromachined separation column; microscale gas chromatograph; performance tests; preconcentration factors; rapidly annealed glass/metal/Si solder bonding; roughly spherical granules; sample flow; sensitivity; thermal isolation; thick micromachined Si heater; uniform thermal desorption; vapor capture; vapor concentration; volatile organic compounds; volumetric flow rates; Bonding; Etching; Fabrication; Glass; Heating; Materials testing; Rapid thermal annealing; Rough surfaces; Sensor arrays; Surface roughness;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Microelectromechanical Systems, Journal of
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1057-7157
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/JMEMS.2003.811748
  • Filename
    1203764