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Self-cleaning hydrogen sensors may soon join the
ranks of self-cleaning ovens, self-cleaning windows and self-cleaning
public toilets, according to Penn State researchers.
"The photocatalytic properties of titania nanotubes
are so large -- a factor of 100 times greater than any other form of
titania -- that sensor contaminants are efficiently removed with
exposure to ultraviolet light, so that the sensors effectively recover
or retain their original hydrogen sensitivity in real world
application," says Dr. Craig A. Grimes, associate professor of
electrical engineering and materials science and engineering.
Previous research showed that titania nanotubes at
room temperature have a completely reversible electrical resistance
change of about 100,000,000 percent when exposed to 1000 parts per
million of hydrogen. These nanotube sensors can monitor hydrogen
levels from parts per billion to about 4 percent, the explosive limit.
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FESEM images of the
titania nanotube array prepared using an anodization potential of
10 V, top view. |
Hydrogen sensors are widely used in the chemical,
petroleum and semiconductor industries. They are also used as
diagnostic tools to monitor certain types of bacterial infections.
"In a bakery, for example, sensors sniff hydrogen
and measure temperature to determine when goods are done," says Grimes.
"Hydrogen sensors are also used in combustion systems of automobiles
to monitor pollution."
However, the environments where people use hydrogen
sensors, such as petroleum plants, can get very dirty. In addition to
Grimes, the researchers include: Gopal K. Mor and Oomman K. Varghese,
postdoctoral fellows; Michael V. Pishko, associate professor of
chemical engineering, and Maria A. Carvalho, graduate student in
chemical engineering, investigated the photocatalytic oxidation of
contaminants on the hydrogen sensors. They reported their results in
recent issues of the Journal of Materials Research and Sensor Letters.
The hydrogen sensors are titania nanotubes coated
with a discontinuous layer of palladium. The researchers tried to
contaminate the sensors with a variety of substances including stearic
acid a fatty acid, cigarette smoke and different types of oil. While
all these contaminants were self-cleanable via photocatalytic
properties of the nanotubes, most experiments focused on recovery of
the sensor after immersion in different types of motor oils, viewed as
the ultimate contamination by the investigators.
The researchers exposed the hydrogen sensors to
1000 parts per million of hydrogen, at room temperature, finding in
their initial sensor designs a 175,000 percent change in resistance.
The sensors were then coated with a layer of motor oil several tens of
microns thick, that completely extinguished their hydrogen
sensitivities.
In an air atmosphere, the researchers exposed the
sensor to ultraviolet light for 10 hours. After one hour, the sensors
had recovered a large portion of their sensitivity, and after 10 hours
the sensors, compared to their uncontaminated selves, had almost fully
regained their hydrogen sensitivities.
"The recovered sensor has a 1000 part per million
hydrogen normalized resistance value of approximately .0005 percent,
compared with the .0006 percent value of the sensor prior to
contamination," says Grimes.
The sensors could not recover from all contaminants,
for example a coating of the spray-on oil WD-40, as these contaminants
contain salts, which degrade the photocatalytic properties of the
nanotubes.
"By doping the titania nanotubes with trace amounts
of different metals such as tin, gold, silver, copper, niobium and
others, a wide variety of chemical sensors can be made," says Grimes.
"This doping does not alter the photocatalytic properties of the
titania nanotubes."
Sensors in uncontrolled locations in the real
world become contaminated by a variety of substances including
volatile organic vapors, carbon soot and oil vapors as well as dust
and pollen. A self-cleaning function, capable of oxidizing
contaminants, would extend sensor lifetime and minimize sensor errors. |