4.6 Review

Magnetic gas sensing: working principles and recent developments

Journal

NANOSCALE ADVANCES
Volume 3, Issue 6, Pages 1551-1568

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0na00826e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Department of Science and Technology (DST)-SERB Early Career Research project [ECR/2017/001850]
  2. DST-Nanomission [DST/NM/NT/2019/205(G), DST/TDT/SHRI-34/2018]
  3. Karnataka Science and Technology Promotion Society [KSTePS/VGST-RGS-F/2018-19, 829/315]

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Gas sensors work by translating gas adsorption effects on active materials into detectable signals, with magnetic gas sensors showing promise in addressing issues with chemical selectivity and sensitivity to humidity and high temperatures. However, challenges remain in modifying the magnetic properties of materials when exposed to gas molecules.
Gas sensors work on the principle of transforming the gas adsorption effects on the surface of the active material into a detectable signal in terms of its changed electrical, optical, thermal, mechanical, magnetic (magnetization and spin), and piezoelectric properties. In magnetic gas sensors, the change in the magnetic properties of the active materials is measured by one of the approaches such as Hall effect, magnetization, spin orientation, ferromagnetic resonance, magneto-optical Kerr effect, and magneto-static wave oscillation effect. The disadvantages of different types of gas sensors include their chemical selectivity and sensitivity to humidity and high-temperature operation. For example, in the case of chemiresistive-type gas sensors, the change in the sensor resistance can drastically vary in the real environment due to the presence of other gas species and the overall electrical effect is quite complex due to simultaneous surface reactions. Further, it is not easy to make stable contacts for powdered samples for the conventional electrical property-based gas sensors. Fire hazard is another issue for the electrical property-based hydrogen gas sensors due to their flammable nature at higher operating temperature. In this regard, to solve these issues, magnetic gas sensor concepts have emerged, in which the magnetic properties of the materials get modified when exposed to gas molecules. In this review article, the working principles, fundamentals, recent developments, and future perspectives in magnetic gas sensors are reviewed. Finally, the prospects and opportunities in these exciting fields are also commented upon based on their current progress.

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