AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study highlights the importance of humidity-tolerant hydrogen sensors for safety in fuel cells and electrolyzers, especially since hydrogen-air mixtures are highly flammable.
  • - Researchers developed a high-performance optical nanoplasmonic hydrogen sensor that can detect hydrogen at 100 ppm in 80% humidity, surpassing the U.S. Department of Energy's goal of <1000 ppm.
  • - The sensor meets stability standards and shows robust performance over 140 hours, illustrating that neural-network-based data processing can enhance sensor capabilities in high-humidity environments.

Article Abstract

Environmental humidity variations are ubiquitous and high humidity characterizes fuel cell and electrolyzer operation conditions. Since hydrogen-air mixtures are highly flammable, humidity tolerant H sensors are important from safety and process monitoring perspectives. Here, we report an optical nanoplasmonic hydrogen sensor operated at elevated temperature that combined with Deep Dense Neural Network or Transformer data treatment involving the entire spectral response of the sensor enables a 100 ppm H limit of detection in synthetic air at 80% relative humidity. This significantly exceeds the <1000 ppm US Department of Energy performance target. Furthermore, the sensors pass the ISO 26142:2010 stability requirement in 80% relative humidity in air down to 0.06% H and show no signs of performance loss after 140 h continuous operation. Our results thus demonstrate the potential of plasmonic hydrogen sensors for use in high humidity and how neural-network-based data treatment can significantly boost their performance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10853499PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-45484-9DOI Listing

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