Abstract

By varying the control voltages of commercially available zirconia-based automotive exhaust gas oxygen sensors, other oxygen-containing molecules such as H2O and CO2 can be measured. Typical water concentration sensors that measure relative humidity via swelling of certain polymers have a narrow temperature range of operation (typically < 120{degree sign}C) and limited accuracy of about {plus minus} 0.4% absolute. Initial measurements with modified zirconia oxygen sensors, both in the laboratory and on engine dynamometers, have shown that water vapor concentration in a gas stream can be measured accurately to {plus minus} 0.1% over the range from 0-20 vol% H2O at temperatures up to 800{degree sign}C.

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