Resistive oxygen sensors are an inexpensive alternative to the classical potentiometric zirconia oxygen sensor, especially for use in harsh environments and at temperatures of several hundred °C or even higher. This device-oriented paper gives a historical overview on the development of these sensor materials. It focuses especially on approaches to obtain a temperature independent behavior. It is shown that although in the past 40 years there have always been several research groups working concurrently with resistive oxygen sensors, novel ideas continue to emerge today with respect to improvements of the sensor response time, the temperature dependence, the long-term stability or the manufacture of the devices themselves using novel techniques for the sensitive films. Materials that are the focus of this review are metal oxides; especially titania, titanates, and ceria-based formulations.
By measuring the electrical properties of the catalyst coating itself, one can observe directly and in situ the state of TWC, LNT, and SCR catalysts. Two principles are possible: a contact method, for which the coating is applied to planar electrodes and the electrical impedance is measured, and a non-contact method, in which the coating material is penetrated by radio frequency waves. In either case, the catalyst state is directly correlated with the measured transmission or reflection characteristics of the electrical sensors.
Articles you may be interested inInvestigating the molecule-substrate interaction of prototypic tetrapyrrole compounds: Adsorption and selfmetalation of porphine on Cu(111) J. Chem. Phys. 138, 154710 (2013); 10.1063/1.4800771 Adsorption geometry, conformation, and electronic structure of 2H-octaethylporphyrin on Ag(111) and Fe metalation in ultra high vacuumThe adsorption of benzene, naphthalene, and anthracene on the TiO 2 (110) surface has been investigated using near edge x-ray absorption spectroscopy ͑NEXAFS͒, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and thermal programmed desorption. For all three adsorbates a planar adsorption geometry is found. In contrast to the bonding of benzene and larger acenes to metal surfaces, we find that the interaction is dominated by electrostatic forces between the adsorbed molecules and the TiO 2 (110) substrate. The fact that the average tilt angle between molecular and surface plane as determined by NEXAFS is substantially different from zero indicates the presence of defect species.
Exhaust gas aftertreatment systems, which reduce nitrogen oxide emissions of heavy‐duty diesel engines, commonly use a selective catalytic reduction (SCR) catalyst. Currently, emissions are controlled by evaluating NOx or NH3 in the gas phase downstream the catalyst and calculating the NH3 loading via a chemical storage model. Here, a microwave‐cavity perturbation method is proposed in which electromagnetic waves are excited by probe feeds and the reflected signals are measured. At distinct resonance frequencies, the reflection coefficient shows a pronounced minimum. These resonance frequencies depend almost linearly on the NH3 loading of a zeolite‐based SCR catalyst. Since the NH3 loading‐dependent electrical properties of the catalyst material itself are measured, the amount of stored ammonia can be determined directly and in situ. The cross‐sensitivity towards water can be reduced almost completely by selecting an appropriate frequency range.
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