Silica aerogels are ideal materials for active and passive components in
optical oxygen sensors. Their visible transparency, high surface area, facile
transport of gases through the material, thermal and chemical stability,
and ability to be filled with additional active phases are the key
properties that aerogels bring to sensor applications. The
Microstructured Materials Group has recently discovered a new process
that induces a permanent, visible photoluminescence in silica aerogels
(see the section on aerogel composite materials). Shortly after these
materials were prepared, it was observed that the intensity of the
photoluminescence was indirectly proportional to the amount of gaseous
oxygen within the aerogel. The quenching of photoluminescence by oxygen
is a phenomenon that is frequently observed in many luminescent
materials.
In simple terms, photoluminescence occurs when a material absorbs a
photon of sufficient energy. The entity that absorbs the photon may be a
discrete molecule, or a defect center in a solid-state material, and is
often referred to a "carrier". When the photon has been absorbed, the
carrier is moved into a high energy, "excited" state. The carrier will
then relax back to its ground state after a certain length of time. This
"lifetime" of the excited state is usually on the order of nanoseconds
to microseconds. The mechanism by which the carrier relaxes determines
whether the photoluminescence is termed "fluorescence" or
"photoluminescence." If an oxygen molecule collides with a carrier while
it is in its excited state, the oxygen molecule will absorb the excess
energy of the carrier and quench the photoluminescence. The oxygen
molecule absorbs the energy and undergoes a triplet-to-singlet
transition, while the carrier undergoes a non-radiative relaxation. The
efficiency of the photoluminescence quenching is, therefore, determined
by the number of collisions between the material containing the carrier,
and oxygen molecules. As the collision frequency of gases is determined
by, the pressure (P), temperature (T), and the number of molecules
present, at a certain P and T, the quenching efficiency, and,
consequently, the photoluminescence intensity will be determined by the
concentration of oxygen in the atmosphere surrounding the material.
Oxygen sensors based on this principle have been extensively studied.
The most common sensor elements studied are those based on an organic or
inorganic compound suspended in a thin silicone membrane. Advantages of
using an aerogel-based sensor element over these systems include a more
rapid response time (due to rapid diffusion of gases through the
aerogel pore network), and improved resistance to photo-bleaching (as
the photoluminescence is caused by stable defect centers in SiO2). The
Microstructured Materials Group has built a prototype oxygen sensor
based on this technology. The sensor is intended to perform as low cost,
moderate sensitivity device operating most effectively in the
concentration range of 0-30% oxygen. The sensor operates independently
of the nature of the other gases present in the feed gas and of the feed
gas flow rate. The prototype sensor has been successfully operated over
a temperature range of -25 to +85 degrees C (this range is based on
other experimental limitations of the system, the actual usable range is
larger). The highest sensitivity is observed at lower temperatures.
The prototype sensor uses a Hg-arc lamp for excitation (330 nm), and a
Si photodiode for detection of the emission (500nm). The prototype
design can be easily miniaturized, and a device can be designed with
built-in pressure and temperature compensation.
This sensor is available for technology-transfer (see the Aerogel Technology Transfer Page).
The graphic below plots the measured photoluminescence intensity
(irradiance) vs oxygen pressure (concentration gives a similar plot) at
two temperatures using the prototype sensor.
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