Sensors based on high-temperature-stable semiconducting gallium oxide
thin films may be used to monitor the composition of hot exhaust gases
from internal combustion engines or furnace installations. The electr
ial d.c. conductance of these low-cost devices, operable in the temper
ature range 700-1000-degrees-C, represents the sensor signal. Investig
ations have been performed in the laboratory, using a special gas-mixi
ng system that supplies a mixture of the main components of real exhau
st gas (N2, O2, CH4, CO, NO, water vapour) to produce a synthetic exha
ust gas with very precisely defined composition. Additional investigat
ions have been performed in real exhaust gas on an engine bench test-b
ed. In the temperature range 1000-900-degrees-C the gallium oxide sens
ors respond to the oxygen partial pressure of the mixture's thermodyna
mic equilibrium. With knowledge of the fuel composition (carbon-hydrog
en ratio), this yields a simple k measurement for lambda=1.2-0.85 with
a resistance jump of about three decades at the stoichiometric point.
The main mechanism in this temperature regime is a setting of the bul
k defect equilibrium. At lower temperatures, the influence of surface-
located mechanisms becomes more important: between 800 and 700-degrees
-C the jump at the stoichiometric points becomes smaller and broader,
but there is still a monotonic lambda dependency. At 600-degrees-C or
below, the monotonic A dependency is lost.