Sensors 1991
DOI: 10.1002/9783527620135.ch7
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Liquid Electrolyte Sensors: Potentiometry, Amperometry, and Conductometry

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Cited by 7 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Although electrochemical technology had long been proposed as a basis for gas detection [6], key advances in the design of gas diffusion electrodes [7] and the introduction of gas phase diffusion barriers in the late 1970s [8] were key enablers for the first truly practical designs. Early commercial products such as those marketed by City Technology (London, UK) in 1977 [9] (Figure 1) offered a compelling combination of attractive features for instrument designers and end users which none of the competing technologies available at the time could surpass.…”
Section: Consumable-anode Sensors—success Through Iterative Improvementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although electrochemical technology had long been proposed as a basis for gas detection [6], key advances in the design of gas diffusion electrodes [7] and the introduction of gas phase diffusion barriers in the late 1970s [8] were key enablers for the first truly practical designs. Early commercial products such as those marketed by City Technology (London, UK) in 1977 [9] (Figure 1) offered a compelling combination of attractive features for instrument designers and end users which none of the competing technologies available at the time could surpass.…”
Section: Consumable-anode Sensors—success Through Iterative Improvementmentioning
confidence: 99%