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  5. Correction model for metal oxide sensor drift caused by ambient temperature and humidity
 
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Correction model for metal oxide sensor drift caused by ambient temperature and humidity

Journal
Sensors
ISSN
1424-8220
Date Issued
2022
Author(s)
Abdulnasser Nabil Abdullah
Kamarulzaman Kamarudin
Universiti Malaysia Perlis
Latifah Munirah Kamarudin
Universiti Malaysia Perlis
Abdul Hamid Adom
Universiti Malaysia Perlis
Syed Muhammad Mamduh Syed Zakaria
Universiti Malaysia Perlis
Zaffry Hadi Mohd Juffry
Victor Hernandez Bennetts
DOI
10.3390/s22093301
Abstract
For decades, Metal oxide (MOX) gas sensors have been commercially available and used in various applications such as the Smart City, gas monitoring, and safety due to advantages such as high sensitivity, a high detection range, fast reaction time, and cost-effectiveness. However, several factors affect the sensing ability of MOX gas sensors. This article presents the results of a study on the cross-sensitivity of MOX gas sensors toward ambient temperature and humidity. A gas sensor array consisting of temperature and humidity sensors and four different MOX gas sensors (MiCS-5524, GM-402B, GM-502B, and MiCS-6814) was developed. The sensors were subjected to various relative gas concentrations, temperatures (from 16 °C to 30 °C), and humidity levels (from 75% to 45%), representing a typical indoor environment. The results proved that the gas sensor responses were significantly affected by the temperature and humidity. The increased temperature and humidity levels led to a decreased response for all sensors, except for MiCS-6814, which showed the opposite response. Hence, this work proposed regression models for each sensor, which can correct the gas sensor response drift caused by the ambient temperature and humidity variations. The models were validated, and the standard deviations of the corrected sensor response were found to be 1.66 kΩ, 13.17 kΩ, 29.67 kΩ, and 0.12 kΩ, respectively. These values are much smaller compared to the raw sensor response (i.e., 18.22, 24.33 kΩ, 95.18 kΩ, and 2.99 kΩ), indicating that the model provided a more stable output and minimised the drift. Overall, the results also proved that the models can be used for MOX gas sensors employed in the training process, as well as for other sets of gas sensors.
Subjects
  • MOX sensors

  • Cross-sensitivity

  • 3D linear regression

  • Temperature

  • Humidity

  • Drift correction

File(s)
sensors-22-03301-v3.pdf (88.37 MB)
Views
11
Acquisition Date
Nov 19, 2024
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12
Acquisition Date
Nov 19, 2024
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