novel wide area hydrogen sensing technology

42
Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology W. Hoagland D. K. Benson R. D. Smith

Upload: rudyard-tate

Post on 30-Dec-2015

29 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology. W. Hoagland D. K. Benson R. D. Smith. Outline. New developmental hydrogen gas indicators Technologies Response kinetics Possible applications. What are Chemochromic H2 Detectors?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

W. Hoagland

D. K. Benson

R. D. Smith

Page 2: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Outline

New developmental hydrogen gas indicators

Technologies Response kinetics Possible applications

Page 3: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

What are Chemochromic H2 Detectors?

Chemochromic hydrogen detectors change color when exposed to gaseous hydrogen. This color change is caused by a chemical reaction between hydrogen and the active material. It may be reversible or non-reversible.

Page 4: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Reversible partial reductionof tungsten trioxide

Coloration

1. H2 + 2(Pd) 2(Pd.H)

2. 2(Pd.H) + 2(WO3) 2(W+5O2.OH) + 2(Pd)

Bleaching

3. 2(W+5O2.OH) + 1/2O2 2WO3 + H2O

Page 5: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

ChemochromicChemical Reactions

Optical absorption by electrons localized at oxide vacancies

Electrons are localized in the vicinity of W5+ ions as small polarons

hv + W5+(A) + W6+(B) W6+(A) + W5+(B)

Page 6: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Technology addresses a recognized need

“Although safety-by-design and passive mitigation systems are preferred, it will still be necessary to develop technologies to detect hydrogen releases or other system failures.For example, coatings that change color upon exposure to hydrogen can provide immediate visual evidence of a leak.”

U.S. DOE Multi-year Plan 2003-2010

Page 7: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Critical Research Topic

“The overall goal is to develop low-cost sensor technologies that are not based on conventional practices, that can be directly integrated with hydrogen systems, and that are resistant to contamination.”

…Goal #3: Develop a sensing technology for a wide-area determination of hydrogen presence prior to any combustion or local temperature rise.”

U.S. DOE - February 2004

Page 8: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Advantages of Chemochromic Hydrogen Indicators

Reversible color change Inherently safe – no ignition source Convenient indication from a distance No instrumentation needed Applicable in various forms

Paints, inks, coatings Tape/Stretch Films Conformable Wrap Decals

Very low cost

Page 9: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Typical structures of chemochromic indicator material

Substrate polymer sheet

Tungsten oxide 500 nm

Palladium 3 nm

PTFE 100 nm Vacuum depositedmulti-layerthin film

Nano-powderTungsten oxide (~50 nm)

PlatinizedChemically (~5%)

Chemically synthesizednano-particles

Page 10: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Thin film indicator responds quickly and reversibly

Page 11: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Thin Film Indicator

Could be used for lettering on safety decals

No hydrogen present

Hydrogen present

Page 12: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Flexible Plastic Indicating Tape

Could be used to wrap around pipe fittings

Page 13: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Shrink wrap indicator appliedto a low pressure cylinder with an intentional 50 micron hole

Page 14: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Nano-particles could be used in “smart paints” or printing inks

• Epoxy (100% solids)

• Polyurethane

• Acrylic (Solvent based)

• Acrylic (Water Based)

Paint formulations shown to work include:

Page 15: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Indicators turn dark blue when exposed to hydrogen

Optical Absorption

0

20

40

60

80

500 600 700 800 900 1000

Wavelength (nm)

Ab

so

rpti

on

(%

)

Page 16: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Transmittance at 830 nm

0

50

100

0 100 200 300

Time (s)

T (

%)

Response of Chemochromicindicator is exponential

– thin film

Switch to air

H2

Page 17: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Response mechanism

Double exponential decay in transmittance is characteristic of two parallel first-order chemical reactions.

Speculation: The reactions occur at different kinds of catalytic sites -

At the catalyst metal/tungsten oxide interface At catalyst metal/tungsten oxide/gas interface

Page 18: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Response of Chemochromic– nano-particles

Nano-Particles

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 50 100

Time (s)

Re

lati

ve

Tra

ns

mit

tan

ce

(%

)

Page 19: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Response of a Chemochromic– PVA water-base

“Smart Paint”

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

0 200 400 600 800

Time (s)

Rel

ativ

e T

ran

smit

tan

ce (

%)

tau1= 97 s; 100%

Page 20: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Thin film indication threshold in air is less than 400 ppm H2

0

0.005

0.01

0 500 1000 1500

Hydrogen Conc. (ppm)

Init

ial

Slo

pe

of

res

po

ns

e,

(-%

/s)

Page 21: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Chemochromic indicators respond more quickly at higher temperatures

1

10

100

1000

10000

-50 -30 -10 10 30

Temperature (C)

Tim

e c

on

sta

nt

tau

1 (

s)

Page 22: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

A protective coating reduces the effect of humidity

02468

0 20 40 60 80 100

Relative Humidity (%)

Tim

e c

on

sta

nt

(s)

PTFE coating

No coating

Page 23: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Indicator response slows over time

05

10152025303540

0 20 40 60

Exposure (days)

tau

1 (

s)

Page 24: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Different film structures reduce the rate of response slowing

0102030

0 20 40 60 80

Exposure (days)

tau

1 (

s)

Page 25: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

NASA/KSC Project

Page 26: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology
Page 27: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology
Page 28: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology
Page 29: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology
Page 30: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology
Page 31: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

H2 Dispensing Station

Page 32: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

H2 Dispensing Station

Page 33: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

H2 Dispensing Station

Page 34: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

RFID H2 Sensor Network

Page 35: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

RFID Hydrogen Sensors

Page 36: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology
Page 37: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

RFID Response

Page 38: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

On-going R&D Activities

Optimize nano-particle pigment Catalyst choice Pd, Pt, or mixed Catalyst concentration Possible protective coatings

Select suitable paint vehicles Optimize paint formulations for various applications Field test prototype indicators in realistic

environments Optimize thin film coating for polymer substrates

Optimize film component proportions Improve protective coatings to stabilize response

over longer time

Page 39: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Range of Products

Page 40: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Conclusions

Present indicators are promising for leak detection in many applications

New designs are being developed with slower rates of degradation

Performance parameters can be modified for specific applications and requirements

Page 41: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Partnerships

Actively seeking industry partnersStrategicTestingManufacturing

Page 42: Novel Wide Area Hydrogen Sensing Technology

Thank you!

www.elem1.com