Capacitive Pixelated CMOS Electronic Nose
M. A. Basyooni-M.Kabatas (TU Delft - Dynamics of Micro and Nano Systems)
T. Shen (TU Delft - Bio-Electronics)
K. Betlem (TU Delft - Bio-Electronics)
C. Huang (TU Delft - ChemE/Catalysis Engineering)
M.A. van der Veen (TU Delft - ChemE/Catalysis Engineering)
F.P. Widdershoven (TU Delft - Bio-Electronics)
M.K. Ghatkesar (TU Delft - Micro and Nano Engineering)
P.G. Steeneken (TU Delft - Precision and Microsystems Engineering)
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Abstract
Although some of the human senses can nowadays be replaced by low-cost electronic sensors such as microphones and image sensors, a compact low-cost electronic nose (E-nose) remains elusive. In this work, an E-nose is presented that can capacitively detect volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The E-nose consists of an array of 1024 capacitive microelectrodes on a complementary metal-oxide-semiconductor (CMOS) chip, functionalized by inkjet printing. The pixels are coated with a UV-curable ink and metal–organic frameworks (MOFs: ZIF-8, MIL-101(Cr), MIL-140A) to create chemically diverse microdomains that generate gas-specific response patterns through adsorption-driven dielectric loading. ZIF-8 exhibits the highest response to 2-butanone, whereas the UV-curable layer responds most strongly to toluene; both show low cross-sensitivity to water vapor, enabling operation under humid conditions. After calibration in pure gases, reproducible responses to controlled binary mixtures of toluene and 2-butanone are observed. The device operates at low power, combines a large 1024-pixel array with CMOS integration, and offers application-specific functionalization by inkjet printing, providing both low cost and versatility. By further extending the range of functionalization materials, the E-nose can be applied to analyze a wide variety of gases, with potential applications in safety monitoring, health, agriculture, and robotics.