Tuning the Properties of Thin-Film TaRu for Hydrogen-Sensing Applications

Lars J. Bannenberg*, Herman Schreuders, Nathan van Beugen, Christy Kinane, Stephen Hall, Bernard Dam

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)
21 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Accurate, cost-efficient, and safe hydrogen sensors will play a key role in the future hydrogen economy. Optical hydrogen sensors based on metal hydrides are attractive owing to their small size and costs and the fact that they are intrinsically safe. These sensors rely on suitable sensing materials, of which the optical properties change when they absorb hydrogen if they are in contact with a hydrogen-containing environment. Here, we illustrate how we can use alloying to tune the properties of hydrogen-sensing materials by considering thin films consisting of tantalum doped with ruthenium. Using a combination of optical transmission measurements, ex situ and in situ X-ray diffraction, and neutron and X-ray reflectometry, we show that introducing Ru in Ta results in a solid solution of Ta and Ru up to at least 30% Ru. The alloying has two major effects: the compression of the unit cell with increasing Ru doping modifies the enthalpy of hydrogenation and thereby shifts the pressure window in which the material absorbs hydrogen to higher hydrogen concentrations, and it reduces the amount of hydrogen absorbed by the material. This allows one to tune the pressure/concentration window of the sensor and its sensitivity and makes Ta1-yRuy an ideal hysteresis-free tunable hydrogen-sensing material with a sensing range of >7 orders of magnitude in pressure. In a more general perspective, these results demonstrate that one can rationally tune the properties of metal hydride optical hydrogen-sensing layers by appropriate alloying.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8033-8045
Number of pages13
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume15
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023

Keywords

  • metal hydrides
  • neutron reflectometry
  • optical hydrogen sensing
  • ruthenium
  • tantalum
  • thin films
  • X-ray diffraction

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