Investigation of Different Materials as Acetone Sensors for Application in Type-1 Diabetes Diagnosis

Diabetes, one of the most rapidly-growing chronic diseases in the world, is overall relative expensive on both diagnosis and monitoring. Breath acetone has proven to be a biomarker of diabetes which is a metabolite with a strong correlation with blood glucose. Measuring the concentration of acetone in exhaled breath can provide a non-invasive, low risk of infection, low cost, and convenient way to screen diabetics at the early stage and daily monitor the health condition of diabetics. Several materials have been investigated for their ability to detect of breath acetone. The preliminary results show that nanostructured K2W7O22 (KWO), a new functional semiconducting material, synthesized by hydrothermal method, can effectively detect breath acetone at room temperature. This paper emphasizes that the sensing performance of KWO on breath acetone. In addition, a comparison between KWO with other materials for application in sensing acetone is discussed.


Introduction
It is necessary to detect diseases at an early stage since this may minimize harmful effects on the human body. Diabetes, as the 7th leading cause of death in the United States, is a disease that is characterized by a heterogeneous group of blood disorders and can be indicated by high Blood Glucose (BG) levels [1,2]. The remaining 7.2 million people were not diagnosed due to complicated reasons. One of major concerns is due to expensive and complicated diagnosing process [3]. So, it is necessary to provide an affordable, reliable, and convenient method which makes the segment of population to obtain diagnosis and treatment in time.
There are many ways to screen diabetes in the early stage, such as the A1C test (a blood test that provides information about blood glucose levels) [4], the Fasting Plasma Glucose Test (FPG), and the Oral Glucose Tolerance Test (OGTT) [5]. These tests are accurate but inconvenient with relatively high cost.
Most recently, detection of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) in exhaled breath has caused a lot attention since some of VOCs are found closely related to human health [6]. Therefore, some Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) have been identified as biomarkers for different diseases, such as carbon disulphide for Schizophrenia [7,8], isovaleric acid for urinary tract infections [9], dodecane, 4-methyl decane, and undecane for melanoma [10]. Besides the compounds listed above, breath acetone, has also received attention due to a good correlation between the concentration of acetone in exhaled breath and blood sugar level in human body [11,12]. This is because metabolic disorders can affect the concentration of acetone in human breath [13][14][15][16][17]. So, breath acetone can be used as a biomarker to diagnose diabetes. By measuring the concentration of acetone in human breath [17,18], it could provide a convenient, inexpensive, and non-invasive way for early-stage diabetes diagnosis and health condition monitoring. Generally, concentration of exhaled breath acetone is usually in the range of 0.3-0.9 Parts-Per-Million (ppm) for healthy humans and above 1.8 ppm for diabetic patients [18]. While, acetone concentration between 0.9 ppm to 1.8 ppm is considered as prediabetes. Thus, a breath analyzer to detect the concentration of breath acetone below 0.9 ppm could be an efficient way of screening diabetes at an early stage.
The nanostructured K 2 W 7 O 22 (KWO) material [19], recently developed in our research group, shows a sensitive response to acetone at room temperature. The preliminary results indicate that such sensitive response is mainly due to the porous structure and excellent ferroelectric property [20] of KWO material. This could cause a strong surface interaction and effective charge transfer between sensing molecules and KWO. In this paper, we will briefly discuss the sensing performance of KWO to detect acetone. In the meanwhile, we choose other four materials: Pt-InN [13], Polypyrrole (PPy)-WO 3 [21], Ni/InGaN/GaN [22], and Pd/TiO 2 /Si [23], which all show good response to acetone. The main purpose of this paper is to study those five materials with different sensing conditions for their potential application in diabetes diagnosis and monitoring [24,25]. In this section, a brief description of KWO synthesis will be presented. In addition, KWO film preparation, equipment and procedure of a chemiresistive sensor based on KWO to detect acetone are discussed. The single crystalline nanostructured KWO was synthesized by a hydrothermal technique [26,27]. Briefly, a precursor solution containing Na 2 WO 4 , oxalic acid, K 2 SO 4 , and HCL is made.

Experimental Section
This solution is then put into a 30 mL autoclave for synthesis. KWO The average length of the nanorods is about several micron and the diameter of nanorod is about 10 nm, which are adjustable through synthesis conditions. Electric contact pads made of gold are sputtering deposition onto the thin film. The sensing response of KWO by exposing acetone is determined by measuring its resistance between the metal contacts with an electrometer (Keithley 6514).
More information regarding KWO to detect acetone can be found from our published literatures [19,24,25].

Results
This section mainly discusses the sensing performance based The material KWO (made in our group) is grown with thermal temperature at 225 o C. Figure 2a shows the response of KWO to detect acetone with variable concentration from 0 ppm to 50 ppm at room temperature with RH ~ 30%. It was observed that the sensitivity is only 6.34% while acetone concentration is about 0.125 ppm. It is not optimal considering its potential clinic application. A much lower detection limit of acetone is needed.
After we modified the signal collecting circuits, the KWO sensor can be used to detect quite low concentration of acetone, for example, 0.125 ppm with decent sensitivity. Figure 2b shows the response to acetone which concentration is from 0 to 6.25 ppm. The results indicated a detection limit can be up to 0.1 ppm with sensitivity around 50.75%. It is about 8 times higher than the sensitivity of 6.34% based on our previous sensing system. The results revealed that KWO is a promising sensing material to detect acetone.

PPy-WO 3
The sensing response of PPy-WO 3 (20%) hybrid nanocomposite sensor [21] to different concentration of acetone at operating temperature 90 o C has been redrawn in Figure 3 (The graph is based on the data of Figure 2(b) in article [21]). As indicated in the Figure, the sensitivity of this sensor is quite low, which is less than 0.5% even when acetone concentration is 200 ppm.  Figure 4 (The data has taken from the graph of (2b and 4b) in article [13]). It was found that Pt-InN (red line) shows higher more sensitive to acetone compared to bare InN (blue line). The sensitivity of 4.95% was observed on Pt-InN while was almost two times higher than the sensitivity of bare InN, 2.4% while acetone concentration was 0.4 ppm.

Nanocrystalline TiO 2
In article [23], nanocrystalline TiO 2 based Metal Insulator Semiconductor (MIS) was used as the sensing material to detect different concentrations of acetone (10, 50, 100 ppm) from 100 o C to 200 o C. Figure 5 shows the response magnitude of TiO 2 sensor for 10, 50, 100 ppm at three different temperatures (The data of Figure 4 has taken from the graph (6) in article [23]). The overall sensivities of TiO 2 to acetone are no more than 5%. While, they observed that the sensing response can be improved a little bit while sensors were operating at higher temperature.

Ni/InGaN/GaN
In article [22], Ni/InGaN/GaN heterostructure resistive sensor is used to detect acetone concentration from 100-400 ppm at fixed operating temperature 100 o C. They measured the sensitivity in terms of ratio of current in presence of acetone vapor (Iac) to current in air (Iair). Figure 6 shows the sensitivity of the heterostructure sensor has a slight increase while the acetone concentration is higher, 1.034% on 400 ppm of acetone and 1.022% on 100 ppm of acetone (The data of Figure 6 has taken from the graph 4(a) of article [22]).

InN Gas Sensor
Kun Wei, investigated [13] how well an Indium Nitride (InN) gas sensor having a thickness of 10nm was able to detect acetone down to 0.4 ppm (Figure 4)

Pd/TiO 2 /p-Si MIS Sensor
Hazra, introduced a nanocrystalline TiO 2 based sensor [23] that can detect acetone from 10 to 100 ppm ( Figure 5). They prepared a TiO 2 sensing layer-based MIS device structure that was operated between 100 to 200oC. They observed the response time was 7.7 sec at 100 o C for 10 ppm. Also, the sensitivity is better while the sensor worked at higher temperature.

Ni/InGaN/GaN Heterostructure Sensor
Subhasis, developed a [22] Ni/InGaN/GaN based heterostructure resistive gas sensor ( Figure 6). They exposed this sensor to 100 ppm acetone with an operating of bias 0.4 V at 373 K (100 o C).
In their analysis, they observed the response time of ~7.6-8.4 second and a corresponding recovery time of ~ 4.5-19.1 second.

KWO Sensor
The KWO sensor, as shown in Figure 2, can detect acetone concentration up to 0.1 ppm at room temperature (25 o C) based on a chemiresisive sensing mechanism. The KWO nanorods exhibits excellent sensing performance to acetone [31].
As a summary, Table 1 describe the sensing performances based above materials for application in acetone detection. Considering the application purpose -a tool of early-stage diabetes diagnosis, it requires that the sensor should have the detection limit as low as 0.9 ppm. As shown in Table 1, among these five materials,   [13] in black and 3a [19] in red). Figure 7 shows that the KWO based chemiresistive sensor demonstrates much higher sensitivity than the Pt-InN based sensor has, while acetone concentrations vary from 0 to 20 ppm. In addition, the KWO sensor can operate at room temperature without requiring any external source of heat, while Pt-InN sensor needs to work under 200 o C. All these indicate that the nanostructured KWO based acetone sensor is an optimal device with less power consumption and higher sensitivity. Also, the KWO sensor device is simple and easy to be made [12] due to its chemiresistive sensing mechanism. The main reason why nanostructured K 2 W 7 O 22 shows much better sensing performance on the detection of acetone can be explained by its high surface to volume ratio due to the nanoscale and porous structure and the specific material property -the room-temperature ferroelectric property of KWO (detailed discussion can be found in our published paper [24]). All of these properties result in an efficient surface interaction between KWO and acetone. While, the sensing processes based on the other four acetone sensors, all need to operate at an evaluated temperatures (> 100 o C). This is mainly due to a surface oxidation reaction between the materials and acetone [30,31]. In a word, according to above discussion, it reveals that the material and structure properties play the most important role in detecting acetone. Since as-fabricated nanostructured KWO has a room-temperature ferroelectric property and high surface area [19,24], it provides an effective surface to sensitively interact with high dipole moment molecules such as acetone even at a low operating temperature.

Conclusion
We have studied and compared five different sensing materials with different operating conditions to detect acetone, the breath biomarker of diabetes. Within these materials, the nanostructured KWO showed the best response to acetone, which can detect the lowest concentration of acetone up to 0.1 ppm with fast response only around 12s at room temperature. As a completely newly synthesized nanostructured material, this unique material and structure property -room temperature ferroelectric property and high surface area with porous structure provide a favourable charge transfer and diffusion channel between KWO and acetone, which causes a strong interaction with acetone. In a word, KWO proves to be a promising material with great potential for diabetes diagnosis and monitoring under practical applications.