Optical hydrogen sensors have the power to reliably detect hydrogen in an inherently safe way, which is crucial to ensure safe operation and prevent emissions of hydrogen as an indirect greenhouse gas. These sensors rely on metal hydride material that can reversibly absorb hydrog
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Optical hydrogen sensors have the power to reliably detect hydrogen in an inherently safe way, which is crucial to ensure safe operation and prevent emissions of hydrogen as an indirect greenhouse gas. These sensors rely on metal hydride material that can reversibly absorb hydrogen when it is present in the environment, and as a result, change their optical properties. To apply this technology along hydrogen infrastructure, in hydrogen-powered planes and other vehicles, it is crucial that these sensors can operate down to −60 °C, a challenge so far unaddressed. Here, it is showed that metal hydride hydrogen sensing materials can be used to detect hydrogen optically down to −60 °C in just a couple of seconds and across a hydrogen concentration range of 0.02–100% with a 1% change in transmission per order of magnitude change in hydrogen concentration. The in-situ X-ray diffraction and optical transmission measurements show that Ta, Ta88Pd12, Ta88Ru12, and Pd60Au40 can gradually, reversibly and hysteresis-free absorb hydrogen while providing sufficient optical contrast. Specifically, Ta88Ru12 possesses the largest optical contrast and the swiftest response down to 6 s at −60 °C. These results confirm the operational viability and foretell new applications of metal hydride hydrogen sensing in cold conditions.
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