“…The demand for the quantitative analysis of hydrogen in solid-state substances has recently grown because of the increasing studies on materials related to hydrogen production, transportation, storage, and utilization (e.g., fuel cells, hydrogen storage materials, and structural materials for hydrogen transportation) for the realization of an environmentally friendly society. Several analytical techniques are currently applied for this purpose, including thermal desorption spectroscopy, inert gas or vacuum fusion/gas chromatography, , secondary-ion mass spectrometry (SIMS), , and glow discharge optical emission spectrometry (GD-OES) . However, their application areas are limited; for example, SIMS is limited to trace analysis (ppb–ppm), whereas GD-OES can perform only a rough concentration determination.…”