Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
740944 Sensors and Actuators B: Chemical 2010 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

A capacitance/dielectric sensor was designed, constructed, and used to measure in real time the in situ water concentration in a desiccant water bed. Measurements were carried out with two experimental setups: (1) passing nitrogen through a humidity generator and allowing the gas stream to become saturated at a measured temperature and pressure, and (2) injecting water via a syringe pump into a nitrogen stream. Both water vapor generating devices were attached to a downstream vertically mounted water capture bed filled with 19.5 g of Moisture Gone™ desiccant. The sensor consisted of two electrodes: (1) a 1/8 in. dia stainless steel rod placed in the middle of the bed and (2) the outer shell of the stainless steel bed concentric with the rod. All phases of the water capture process (background, heating, absorption, desorption, and cooling) were monitored with capacitance. The measured capacitance was found to vary linearly with the water content in the bed at frequencies above 100 kHz indicating dipolar motion dominated the signal; below this frequency, ionic motion caused nonlinearities in the water concentration/capacitance relationship. The desiccant exhibited a dielectric relaxation whose activation energy was lowered upon addition of water indicating either a less hindered rotational motion or crystal reorientation.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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