response time of hydrogen sensorsand the (hydrogen containing) test gas, or vice versa, with the...

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RESPONSE TIME OF HYDROGEN SENSORS Thomas Hübert and Ulrich Banach BAM Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung, Berlin, Germany, [email protected] 1 Id 124

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  • RESPONSE TIME OF HYDROGEN SENSORS

    Thomas Hübert and Ulrich Banach

    BAM Bundesanstalt für Materialforschung und -prüfung, Berlin, Germany,

    [email protected]

    1

    Id 124

  • 2

    IntroductionExperimental Sensors

    Sensor Testing Facility

    ResultsComparison with results from literature

    Influence of hydrogen concentration on step respons e

    DiscussionContributions to delay time of sensors

    Modeling of response and recovery time

    Characteristic parameters

    Summary

    Outline

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    3

    Introduction

    …. seconds are vital !

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    Introduction

    …. seconds are vital !

    Conversely the recovery time (t10) is taken for a sensor to reach

    10 % of the preceding response following exposure to air.

    to define the speed of response of gas sensors

    usual parameters for sensor characterization:

    interval, between

    the time when an instantaneous variation between clean air

    and the (hydrogen containing) test gas,

    or vice versa, with the sensor in a warmed-up condition,

    is produced at the sensor inlet, and

    the time when the response reaches a stated percentage of the stabilised signal

    on the standard test gas (ISO 26142).

    Response time (t90):

    The time taken for a sensor to reach 90 % of the final indication.

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    Requirements on hydrogen sensors

    indication range 0.01 - 10 % hydrogen (safety) or 1 - 100 % (fuel cells)

    safe performance, i.e. explosion proof sensor design and protective housing

    reliable response, sufficient accuracy, sensitivity (uncertainty 5 - 10 % of signal)

    stable signal with low noise

    robustness including low sensitivity to environmental parameters such as:

    temperature (-30 to 80 °C (safety), -70 to 150 °C (fuel cells),

    pressure (80 to 110 kPa)

    relative humidity (10 to 98 %),

    gas flow rate independence,

    mechanical robustness

    fast response and recovery time (5 years)

    low power consumption (

  • 6

    Requirements on hydrogen sensors

    fast response and recovery time

    different requirements:

    ISO 26142 (hydrogen fuel station)

    t90 < 30 s

    t10 < 60 s

    Stationary Power Systems

    t90 < 30 s

    t10 < 30 s

    Car Manufacturer

    t90 < 1 s

    t10 < 1 s

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    Experimental Sensors

    Two semiconductor MOS-type sensors (MOS I), (MOS II).

    Metal-insulator-semiconductor field effect transistor (MIS-FET)

    Schottky diode (RT-Diode)

    Field effect based sensor (RT-FES).

    Schottky Diode

    metal

    interfacial layer

    semiconductor

    MOS Field-Effect Transistor

    metalinsulator

    semiconductor

    S D

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    Experimental Sensor Testing Facility

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    Experimental Sensor Testing Facility

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    Results

    0 5 10 15 20

    0,0

    0,2

    0,4

    0,6

    0,8

    1,0

    1,2

    0,0

    0,2

    0,4

    0,6

    0,8

    1,0

    1,2

    hyd

    roge

    n am

    ount

    in te

    st g

    as in

    % H

    2

    sens

    or in

    dica

    tion

    in %

    H2

    time in s

    ts

    0 5 10 15 20

    0,0

    0,2

    0,4

    0,6

    0,8

    1,0

    1,2

    0,0

    0,2

    0,4

    0,6

    0,8

    1,0

    1,2

    hyd

    roge

    n am

    ount

    in te

    st g

    as in

    % H

    2

    sens

    or in

    dica

    tion

    in %

    H2

    time in s

    ts

    hydrogen on hydrogen off, purging with air

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    Results

    Sensor Response times t90 (s) Recovery timet10 (s)MOS I 2 - 6 10 - 12 MOS II 5 - 16 13 - 50

    MIS-FET 3.3 - 3.5

    2.1 - 2.3

    10.2 - 10.3

    6.8 - 6.9RT Diode 150 - 200 100 - 300RT FES 10 - 15 50 - 70

    Sensor type

    Response This work (s) Results from literature (s)

    Source

    MOSt90 2 - 6

    16≤ 15

    [8][9]

    t10 10 - 1212

    < 30 [8][9]

    MIS-FETt90 2.1 - 2.3

    < 22 - 4

    [10][2]

    t10 6.8 to 6.9< 109.2

    [10][2]

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    Results Influence of hydrogen concentration on step respons e

    0 200 400 600 800 1000

    0

    1

    2

    3

    4

    5

    6

    20

    30

    40

    MOS (TGS) Mishra

    resp

    onse

    tim

    e in

    s

    hydrogen concentration cH2

    (µL/L)

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    Discussion Contributions to delay time of sensors

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    Discussion Modeling of response and recovery time

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    Discussion Modeling of response and recovery time

    0 10 20 30 40 50

    0,0

    0,5

    1,0

    MOS I MOS II FIS-FET RT-Diode RT-FE

    S(t)rel

    time in s0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

    0,0

    0,5

    1,0

    MOS I RT-Diode MIS-FET RT-FET MOS II

    time in s

    S(t)rel

    Signal increase Signal decrease

  • 16

    Discussion Modeling of response and recovery time

    SensorResponse time

    1-exp(-t/τ)Recovery time

    exp(-t/τ´)

    τ r τ‘ rMOS I 2.1±0.1 0.90 4.1±0.2 0.94MOS II 14.7±0.1 0.99 75±4 0.96

    MIS-FET 1.5±0.1 0.98 6.3±0.6 0.91RT Diode 81±3 0.99 45±4 0.92RT-FES 2.9±0.2 0.96 22.3±1.4 0.94

    Sensor Response times t90 (s) Recovery timet10 (s)MOS I 2 - 6 10 - 12 MOS II 5 - 16 13 - 50

    MIS-FET 3.3 - 3.5

    2.1 - 2.3

    10.2 - 10.3

    6.8 - 6.9RT Diode 150 - 200 100 - 300RT FES 10 - 15 50 - 70

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    Discussion Further characteristic parameters

    first response:

    t20

    t50

    alarm:

    20 % UEG (0.8 % H2)

    40 % UEG (1.6 % H2)

    shorter time of responses (< 1 s) are achievable.

    Sensor indication of:

    alarm:

    use of fitted response curves

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    Summary

    IntroductionExperimental Sensors : MOS, MIS-FET, RT-Diode, RT-FES

    Sensor Testing Facility : “delay time” 4 s and 1 0 ms

    Resultst90 < 10 s and t 10 < 20 s

    H2 concentration on step response

    DiscussionContributions to delay time of sensors

    Modeling of response and recovery time

    Characteristic parameters: first response ( t10) , alarm time (20 % UEG)

  • PD Dr. W. Moritz and colleagues

    19

    Acknowledgements

    FCH JU financial support Contract No. 325326

    Humboldt University of Berlin

  • 20

    Thank you for your attention !

  • 21