Abstract
The concept of the micro-structured vacuum sensor presented in this article
is the measurement of the electrical conductivity of thinned gases in order
to develop a small, economical and quite a simple type of vacuum sensor. There
are already some approaches for small vacuum sensors. Most of them are based
on conservative measurement principles similar to those used in macroscopic
vacuum gauges. Ionization gauges use additional sources of energy, like hot
cathodes, ultraviolet radiation or high voltage for example, for ionizing gas
molecules and thereby increasing the number of charge carriers for measuring
low pressures. In contrast, the concept discussed here cannot be found in
macroscopic sensor systems because it depends on the microscopic dimension of
a gas volume defined by two electrodes. Here we present the concept and the
production of a micro-structured vacuum sensor chip, followed by the
electrical characterization. Reference measurements with electrodes at a
distance of about 1 mm showed currents in the size of picoampere
and a conductivity depending on ambient pressure. In comparison with these
preliminary measurements, fundamental differences regarding pressure
dependence of the conductivity are monitored in the electrical
characterization of the micro-structured sensor chip. Finally the future
perspectives of this sensor concept are discussed.
Citation
ID:
32970
Ref Key:
giebel2017conceptjournal