2023-06-252023-06-25https://tore.tuhh.de/handle/11420/15783Introduction Many gases are colorless and odorless and therefore are not perceived by the human sense organs. For toxic gases the monitoring in buildings is indispensable, as for example gas leakages can lead to tremendous health damages. But also the detection of nontoxic gases is of utmost importance for many applications as process control or breath analysis for clinical diagnosis. Many gases exhibit absorption lines in specific fingerprint regions in the mid-infrared wavelength range, for example, CO2 shows high absorption between 4.2 and 4.3 µm. Thus an optical signal at the gas specific wavelength range can interact with the gas and its intensity will be decreased. Optical sensors detect the change in intensity in the fingerprint regions and thus get information about the present gas concentration. In general, an optical sensor consists of three components: 1. a source that emits radiation in the gas specific wavelength range, 2. a gas cell that provides a large interaction length between the light signal and the gas, 3. a detector that is able to detect even small intensity changes. Goals The overall aim of this project is to develop an optical gas sensor on a silicon chip that offers small size and low power consumption. This would open up the way to low-cost mass-production and also allow the implementation of gas sensors into portable devices like mobile phones. In contrast to free-path optical sensing, our approach is based on integrated photonics where light will be guided inside the silicon chip. The evanescent field can interact with gases in the environment and can thus be used for optical sensing. Our current research is based on the following topics: - Integrated silicon based thermal emitter - 2D integrating cell - Integrated silicon based MIR detectorInfrared gas sensing with silicon photonics