The present invention relates to a method for fabricating a hydrogen electrochemical sensor using a tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate (Me4NOH.5H2O), and in particular to a method for fabricating an electrochemical sensor which can reliably detect a hydrogen gas by using Me4NOH.5H2O as a proton conductor.
Hydrogen gas is considered as one of the key energy sources which might be an alternative to fossil fuels because it is environment friendly and exists a lot in nature. However hydrogen gas might be exploded when burning at a concentration of above 4% since its energy conversion is rapidly performed. Various systems for more effectively detecting hydrogen gas are currently under development. As one of the key systems under development, an electrochemical sensor is disclosed, which is known to be able to reliably detect a concentration of hydrogen gas via the changes of current or voltage.
The electrochemical method can quickly detect hydrogen gas even at a lower concentration, and the sizes of systems for detecting hydrogen gas are not advantageously limited.
A conventional hydrogen electrochemical sensor consists of an anode and a cathode for an electrochemical reaction and a proton conductor which transfers protons from the anode to the cathode. As a representative substance used in hydrogen electrochemical sensor among solid proton conductors, there are Nafions and ceramics. In the course of manufacturing sensors, Nafions have excellent ion conductivity, but have unreliable poor stability and costs a lot. Ceramics have excellent stability, but have a reliable ion conductivity only at above 600° C. Since processing is complicated, some problems might occur when ceramics are adapted to sensors.
The electrodes generally used in a hydrogen electrochemical sensor can be used by impregnating metals, which are mainly used as catalysts, in electrodes. Among the methods developed for fabricating an anode and a cathode, a method loading a metal, which operates as catalyst, onto a solid electrolyte directly is called an impregnation-reduction method. The impregnation-reduction method is characterized in that metal complexes are impregnated on a surface of a solid electrolyte and are reduced by a strong reduction agent, and metallic particles are loaded onto the surface. The electrolyte/electrode assembly has an excellent interfacial contact performance, so a desired performance can be obtained with a lower metallic impregnation amount. However, when the solid electrolyte is soluble in water or any of organic solution, an original form of electrolyte cannot be maintained, which hinders actual use.
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide a method for fabricating a hydrogen electrochemical sensor using a tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate in which tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate (Me4NOH.5H2O) with a high ion conductivity and a thermal stability is used as a proton conductor, and a carbon electrode on which platinum dispersed in an organic solution is loaded is used as an anode. So, it is possible to fabricate an electrochemical sensor with an ionic clathrate hydrate which is to detect hydrogen gas.
It is another object of the present invention to provide a method for fabricating a hydrogen electrochemical sensor which uses tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate.
It is further another object of the present invention to provide a hydrogen electrochemical sensor which is fabricated by the above method.
In the present invention, it is possible to fabricate a hydrogen electrochemical sensor which has a fast response time and a fast recovery time even when performing sensing cycles a few tens of time using a tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate (Me4NOH.5H2O) having a high ion conductivity and a thermal stability as a proton conductor.
As compared to a method for fabricating a hydrogen electrochemical sensor which uses Nafions or ceramics widely used as a solid proton conductor, according to the present invention the method for fabricating a hydrogen electrochemical sensor has the following advantages.
(1) Since Me4NOH.5H2O, which is a kind of ionic clathrate hydrate, has a reliable ion conductivity and thermal stability, it is possible to fabricate a hydrogen sensor which operates at room temperature as an alternative to the conventional solid electrolyte including Nafions.
(2) Since Me4NOH.5H2O, a raw material, can be used itself without a specific chemical reaction or a certain pretreatment, the hydrogen electrochemical sensor of the present invention can be fabricated through a very simple process.
(3) Me4NOH.5H2O with a melting point of 68° C., is treated to melt at above melting point and is crystallized at room temperature and then is used as a proton conductor, so it is easy to fabricate a sensor in a desired size and shape.
(4) Compared with other proton conductors including Nafions, Me4NOH.5H2O costs less. Therefore the hydrogen sensor can be economically fabricated at a low cost. In addition, the hydrogen sensor fabricated according to a method of the present invention can effectively detect a hydrogen gas in the current measure mode, even though the concentration of hydrogen gas is below minimum explosion concentration.
The present invention will become better understood with reference to the accompanying drawings which are given only by way of illustration and thus are not limitative of the present invention, wherein;
Since tetramethylammonium hydroxide hydrate (Me4NOH.×H2O), one of representative ionic clathrate hydrate, has a high proton conductivity, it seems to have a high possibility of being used as a solid electrolyte. However since it has a low thermal stability, it remains in a liquid state at above room temperature, so its application as an electronic device remains very limited. Since only tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate (Me4NOH.5H2O) has a melting point of 68° C., it can be applied as a solid electrolyte at around room temperature. The inventors of the present application tried to fabricate an electrochemical sensor which has a fast response and recovery time even when it passes through sensing cycles a few tens of time at near 4% of the minimum explosion concentration of hydrogen gas by using Me4NOH.5H2O as a proton conductor. According to the present invention, it provides a hydrogen electrochemical sensor in which an ionic clathrate hydrate Me4NOH.5H2O with a high ion conductivity and thermal stability is disposed between electrodes.
The method for fabricating a hydrogen electrochemical sensor using tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate according to the present invention has the following process comprising:
a step (i) for slowly adding platinum powder (Pt black) to distilled water; substantially moisturizing a mixture of the platinum powder and the distilled water; subsequently adding nafion perfluorinated resin solution; and then agitating and dispersing to prepare a first dispersed solution;
a step (ii) for adding isopropyl alcohol to the first dispersed solution and dispersing catalyst particles to prepare a second dispersed solution while repeatedly performing agitation and ultrasonic wave treatment;
a step (iii) for uniformly loading the second dispersed solution on a surface of an electrically conductive carbon electrode and vaporizing organic solvent, which is loaded together along with the second dispersed solution, into the air and loading platinum on the carbon electrode and obtaining an anode;
a step (iv) for placing the anode in one side of a cell made of Teflon and placing a carbon electrode, which is loaded with nothing, in the opposite side of the anode as a cathode and connecting the anode and the cathode through a current meter;
a step (v) for injecting tetramethylammonium hydroxide pentahydrate (Me4NOH.5H2O) between the anode and the cathode inside the Teflon cell in a liquid state at above melting point and crystallizing at room temperature for at least one day long and fabricating a proton conductor.
In the above process, platinum powder functions like a catalyst for promoting an electrochemical reaction. And Me4NOH.5H2O is solidified through crystallization after it is injected at above melting point, so good interfacial contacts between the electrodes are obtained, so it is possible to obtain a high ion conductivity since other resistances except for a bulk resistance of a solid electrolyte itself do not exist. In addition, the particles of platinum catalyst layer loaded onto the anode have about 8.8 nm sizes in average along with a high crystalline property and a porous structure. So hydrogen gas can be fast spread, and an electrochemical reaction of hydrogen gas can be promoted.
The hydrogen electrochemical sensor fabricated according to the present invention makes it possible to detect a hydrogen gas based on a change in the current which occurs by means of an electrochemical reaction as a hydrogen gas is split into proton and electron in anode.
The preferred embodiments of the present invention will be described in more details. The embodiments are given only for describing the present invention in more details, and the scope of the present invention is not limited by means of the disclosed embodiments.
Platinum powder (Pt black) of 0.15 g was slowly added to distilled water of 0.3 ml and was substantially moisturized, and 5% nafion perfluorinated resin solution of 0.258 ml was added and dispersed using a magnet agitator. 5% isopropyl alcohol of 2 ml was added, and catalyst particles were well dispersed while repeating agitation and ultrasonic wave treatment. Dispersed solution was uniformly loaded onto a surface of electrically conductive carbon electrode using a brush, and the loaded organic solution was vaporized in the air, and platinum of 3.40 mg and 1.93 mg was loaded on a carbon electrode with a surface of 0.5 cm×1.0 cm, so that anode was fabricated.
The anode was placed in one side of a cell made of Teflon, and a carbon electrode, which was unloaded, was placed in the opposite side of the anode as a cathode, and the anode and the cathode were connected through a current meter. Me4NOH.5H2O was injected between the anode and the cathode inside the Teflon cell in liquid state at above melting point and was crystallized at room temperature for at least one day and was used as a proton conductor.
The hydrogen detecting characteristics are compared when being exposed to a hydrogen-nitrogen mixed gas while adjusting the amount of platinum loaded on anode to 6.18 mg·c m−2 and 3.50 mg·c m−2, respectively.
When hydrogen-nitrogen mixed gas of concentration of 10% and 1% was injected into an anode at a rate of 200 cm3min−1 in the hydrogen electrochemical sensor fabricated according to the method of the embodiment 1, the current sharply increased and become maximum with response time of 6 seconds and 20 seconds, respectively. In case of mixed gas of 1% with lower concentration, the maximum value of the current was relatively lower due to lower partial pressure of hydrogen, which meant that electrochemical sensor, which used ionic clathrate hydrate as solid electrolyte, had enough sensitivity in a concentration range of 1˜10% near the lowest explosion concentration of hydrogen. The current increased as gas was injected starts lowering upon disconnection of supply, and it had recovery time of about 40 seconds without having any influences on the concentration of hydrogen gas. Moreover, Me4NOH.5H2O, which had been used as proton conductor, was not decomposed even when proton was continuously injected for longer sensing time, but exists stably. With the help of stable hydrate, the maximum value of current was maintained constantly at each cycle at which hydrogen-nitrogen mixed gas was injected.
Since catalyst determined reaction rate by lowering activation energy, the amount of platinum catalyst greatly influenced the level of current. As a result of the test performed in the same method as the embodiment 2-1 using the decreased amount of catalyst of 3.50 mg·c m−2, the maximum value of current was much lower, but the response time and recovery speed were almost same.
Along with aforesaid influences according to the concentration of hydrogen gas and the amount of platinum catalyst, the changes of the current based on time when hydrogen-nitrogen mixed gas of 0.1% was injected were measured according to the different voltages of 0.01V, 0.05V and 0.1V respectively, so as to test the response time. As a result, it was shown that the response time was decreased as higher voltage was applied in the above range of voltage.
As the present invention may be embodied in several forms without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof, it should also be understood that the above-described examples are not limited by any of the details of the foregoing description, unless otherwise specified, but rather should be construed broadly within its spirit and scope as defined in the appended claims, and therefore all changes and modifications that fall within the meets and bounds of the claims, or equivalences of such meets and bounds are therefore intended to be embraced by the appended claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2009-0068582 | Jul 2009 | KR | national |