Effect of hydrogen gas on magnetic properties of alloys of ferromagnetic metals with Pd and its application in hydrogen gas sensing
Ivan S. Maksymov, M. Kostylev

TL;DR
This paper reviews ferromagnetic Pd-alloy-based magneto-electronic sensors for hydrogen detection, highlighting their physical mechanisms, performance, and potential for safe, reliable, and rapid hydrogen sensing in fuel-cell applications.
Contribution
It provides an overview of the physical principles and compares the performance of ferromagnetic Pd-alloy sensors with multilayer thin film sensors for hydrogen detection.
Findings
Magneto-electronic sensors can detect hydrogen from 0 to 100% concentration.
Hydrogen induces measurable changes in magnetic properties of Pd-alloy structures.
These sensors have response times approaching one second.
Abstract
The mass-production of fuel-cell vehicles and the eventual transition to the hydrogen economy will require safe, inexpensive and reliable sensors capable of simultaneously detecting low concentrations of leaking hydrogen and measuring broad ranges of hydrogen concentration in storage and energy generating systems. Although several competing sensor technologies can potentially be used in this role, just a few of them have thus far demonstrated a combination of all desirable characteristics. This group of devices also includes magneto-electronic sensors that can detect the presence of hydrogen gas in a range of hydrogen concentrations from zero to 100% at atmospheric pressure with the response time approaching the industry standard of one second. The hydrogen gas sensing mechanism underpinning the operation of magneto-electronic sensors is based on the physical processes of ferromagnetic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMagnetic Field Sensors Techniques · Magnetic properties of thin films · Gas Sensing Nanomaterials and Sensors
