The present invention describes a method for diagnosing electrochemical gas sensor condition using the sensors response to environmental noise.
Electrochemical gas sensors have 2-3 sensor electrodes, including a working (sensing) electrode, surrounded by an electrolyte. The electrode/electrolyte system is enclosed in a sensor housing that is separated from the external environment by a gas permeable membrane. In an electrochemical gas sensor, the target gas diffuses through the membrane and electrolyte, to the working electrode where it is either reduced or oxidized, generating an electrical current. Gas sensing electrodes are designed such that the electrochemical reaction kinetics are very fast, hence the rate determining step is mass transport of the target gas to the electrode. Typically, the rate determining step is diffusion through the gas permeable membrane. This is achieved by designing appropriate electrode catalysts and defining an appropriate electrode potential for the target gas. Having a diffusion limited device ensures a linear relationship between the gas concentration and the current generated at the working electrode. Degradation of the sensor electrodes can slow down the kinetics of the working electrode reaction, hence the sensor will begin to operate in a mixed kinetic/diffusion mode, leading to sensor drift and non-linearity. At this point the sensor readings become unreliable and the GSE sensor should likely be replaced. Methods to diagnose sensor condition are therefore essential to ensure reliable gas monitoring.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,049,283 (EP0841563B1) and U.S. Pat. No. 8,543,340 describe a method for alerting a sensor fault condition by monitoring the output signal of the amplifying circuit, and triggering an alarm when the signal noise (standard deviation, rms, or variance) falls below a threshold value, or is trending downward for an extended period of time. US20060042960A1 uses the stochastic noise of a CO sensor to calculate a gain parameter based on predetermined reference data to correct for sensitivity loss. U.S. Pat. Nos. 6,428,684B1, 558,752, and WO99/22232 confirm a sensor is operating in a diffusion limited regime by changing the applied potential of the working electrode, and plotting potential vs. current, as in a diffusion limited electrochemical process, current is independent of the applied potential. U.S. Pat. No. 7,090,755B2 and EP2327981B1 confirm a sensor is diffusion limited by operating the sensor with reduced reaction capacity thereby allowing gas to accumulate, then increasing the activity and measuring the transient response. These methods require a controlled supply of the target gas. Electrochemical methods including potential step techniques (US20190170679A1, DE4445947C2, U.S. Pat. No. 8,160,834B2) or impedance spectroscopy (WO2000014523A2, US20110199094A1) are used to calculate properties including capacitance and resistance as an indication of sensor health. U.S. Pat. No. 6,629,444 exploits the response of am electrochemical gas sensor to a sudden change in water vapor pressure and measures the transient current response. If the current spike exceeds a predetermined threshold, the sensor is deemed operational. This diagnostic method requires a specialist set up.
Needs exist for improved sensor condition monitoring and diagnostics.
It is the aim of the present invention to use the response of an electrochemical sensor to environmental changes to determine the health of the sensor and establish when a sensor requires replacing.
It has been determined that the baseline electrical output signal (current) of an electrochemical sensor will fluctuate when the sensor is exposed to sudden changes in environmental conditions, including dew point, relative humidity, water vapor pressure, temperature, pressure, and wind speed. Rapid fluctuations in these parameters cause noise in the electrochemical sensor baseline.
Furthermore, after extended use, electrochemical sensors undergo a step change in sensitivity, manifesting as an irreversible decrease in sensitivity. It is believed that this corresponds to the transition from diffusion limited behaviour to a mixed kinetic/diffusion regime, resulting from degradation of the working electrode catalyst and surface area. At this time, the sensor should be replaced. The irreversible drop in sensitivity coincides with a decrease in the sensors response to fluctuations in environmental conditions and therefore a decrease in statistical measures of the electrical output signal noise of the electrochemical sensor. This decrease in noise in the can therefore be used to determine when a sensor needs replacing.
It has also been noted that during periods of high winds, i.e. anomalous weather events, the electrical output signal noise of the sensor drops significantly. The present invention uses this drop in baseline noise to predict weather events.
A further embodiment of this invention is to use an electrochemical sensors response to environmental conditions in neural network applications to estimate the sensor response. Finally, this invention uses the frequency of the electrical output signal noise of an electrochemical gas sensor to detect ambient soundwaves.
These and further and other objects and features of the invention are apparent in the disclosure, which includes the above and ongoing written specification, with the claims and the drawings.
The baseline current of an electrochemical gas sensor responds to changes in environmental conditions. The baseline current is most likely due to oxygen reduction and oxidation of the working electrode. The diffusion limits that control the electrochemical reaction of the target gas allowing the correct operation of an electrochemical gas sensor are not necessarily true for the background current reactions, and so the background current depends on the working electrode composition and area, and the electrolyte composition. Changes in the relative humidity/dew point/water vapor pressure, temperature, air pressure, and windspeed causes a transient current spike in the baseline/background current, most likely due to a change in the rate of the baseline current reaction at the working electrode surface. This could be caused by a fluctuation in the working electrode area or a fluctuation in the composition of the sensor electrolyte due to the environmental change.
The fluctuations in current due to fluctuations in environmental conditions manifest as baseline noise in the electrical signal output of an electrochemical sensor.
A further embodiment of this invention defines the noise factor as the ratio between the sensor output noise metric during the day and at night. During the day, the environmental fluctuations are significant, hence sensor noise level is higher compared to at night. The noise metric is defined as the standard deviation, or the variance, or the rms, or other common statistical measure of noise of the electrical output signal of the sensor. A decrease in the noise factor below a predetermined threshold indicates the sensor needs replacing. In the second part of this invention, the output signal of the sensor is used to predict anomalous weather events.
In the third part of this invention, methods that use noise in neural network applications are described. The electrochemical gas sensor responds to changes in dew point/relative humidity/water vapor pressure, temperature, pressure, and windspeed in a predictable and reproducible manner. It therefore follows that neural networks can be used to estimate the baseline concentration using the values and standard deviation of the dew point, or relative humidity or water vapor pressure. Further embodiments use the values and the standard deviation of the temperature, or air pressure, or wind speed in neural networks to estimate the baseline concentration. The values and rms of, or values and variance of the dew point, or relative humidity, or water vapor pressure, or temperature, or pressure, or wind speed, are also used in neural network applications to predict baseline concentration. Neural networks based on the above parameters are also used to estimate the concentration of the target gas.
While the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, modifications and variations of the invention may be constructed without departing from the scope of the invention, which is defined in the following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 63/049,168 filed Jul. 8, 2020, which is hereby incorporated by reference in its entirety as if fully set forth herein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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63049168 | Jul 2020 | US |