Abstract

Metal hydrides have been widely studied as hydrogen sensing materials and applied to various optical sensor configurations. With the increasing interest in using hydrogen as an energy source across sectors involving combustion processes, there is a growing demand for reliable hydrogen sensors operating at temperatures above 100 °C. Therefore, it is necessary to evaluate the performance of potential hydrogen sensing materials at elevated temperatures. We conducted experiments to observe the optical response and structural characteristics of palladium, palladium–gold, tantalum, and tantalum-alloy thin films with respect to varying hydrogen concentrations from 28 °C to 270 °C. Our results demonstrate that the optical response of palladium and palladium–gold diminish at 270 °C. However, tantalum provides a remarkable optical response to hydrogen concentrations below 1% for all the observed temperatures and a stable response at 270 °C for 350 cycles. Our measurement results show that tantalum is the most suitable material for detecting hydrogen within the range of 0.01% to 100% at temperatures ranging from 28 °C to 270 °C.

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