Solid state gas sensors : industrial application
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Solid state gas sensors : industrial application
(Springer series on chemical sensors and biosensors : methods and applications / Otto S. Wolfbeis series editor, v. 11)
Springer, c2012
- : hard
Available at 2 libraries
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  Okinawa
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Gas sensor products are very often the key to innovations in the fields of comfort, security, health, environment, and energy savings. This compendium focuses on what the research community labels as solid state gas sensors, where a gas directly changes the electrical properties of a solid, serving as the primary signal for the transducer. It starts with a visionary approach to how life in future buildings can benefit from the power of gas sensors. The requirements for various applications, such as for example the automotive industry, are then discussed in several chapters. Further contributions highlight current trends in new sensing principles, such as the use of nanomaterials and how to use new sensing principles for innovative applications in e.g. meteorology. So as to bring together the views of all the different groups needed to produce new gas sensing applications, renowned industrial and academic representatives report on their experiences and expectations in research, applications and industrialisation.
Table of Contents
Part I Requirements on sensing
Future building gas sensing applications
O. Ahmed
Requirements for gas sensors in automotive air quality applications
T. Tille
Automotive hydrogen sensors: current and future requirements
C. Kubel
Requirements for fire detectors
H. Scherzinger
Part II Sensor principles
The power of nanomaterial approaches in gas sensors
C. Baratto, E. Comini, G. Faglia and G. Sberveglieri
Theory and application of suspended gate FET gas sensors
C. Senft, P. Iskra and I. Eisele
Chromium titanium oxide based ammonia sensors
K. Schmitt, C. Peter, J. Woellenstein
Part III Applications
Combined humidity- and temperature sensor
Burgler, F. Krogmann, J. Polak
Gas sensor investigations in characterizing textile fibres
N. Felde and D. Kohl
New approaches for exhaust gas sensing
R. Moos
Technology and application opportunities for SiC FET gas sensors
A. Lloyd Spetz and M. Andersson
Development of planar potentiometric gas sensors for automotive exhaust application
C. Pijolat, J.P. Viricelle
Atmospheric humidity measurements using gas sensors
R. Philipona
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