Development of a Contactless Conductivity Sensor in Flowing Micro Systems for Cerium Nitrate

: Impedance spectroscopy has a high potential to detect chemical reactions in ﬂowing systems. In this work, the approach using impedance spectroscopy as a possible analytical tool for a continuous hydrothermal syntheses (CHTS) is presented. With the CHTS-process, it is possible to produce metalloxide nanoparticles with a close particle size distribution and speciﬁc surface properties. For this, it is necessary to evaluate the electrode geometry, frequency and other factors inﬂuencing the impedance with respect to concentration measurements. In case of frequency-sweep measurements possible electrode geometries for C 4 D-Sensors (capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection) are evaluated. Then distinguishability and reproducibility are tested applying titration measurements to show the ability for concentration detection in constant ﬂow systems. The possibility to measure concentration changes in ﬂowing systems in a reproducible and fast manner as well as with high distinguishability for the test solution cerium nitrate will be presented. Furthermore, the major inﬂuencing-factors like electrode geometry, frequency e tc. could be d etermined. It has been shown that with increasing electrode spacing and electrode width, the distinguishability of the concentrations increases and shifts them to lower frequencies.


Introduction
Over time, the focus of chemical reactions has shifted from analysis of the final product to in situ analysis in the process. Therefore, in recent decades, more and more measurement methods have been developed that can characterize different components in flowing systems. An extremely powerful method for this are high-frequency impedance measurements. The first investigation of high-frequency impedance measurements were conducted in the 1950s [1,2]. With proceeding technical developments, the measurements became more simple, cheaper and flexible. Therefore, in the 1990s, a high interest developed into this measurements and a rapid growing in research began, continuing up to now [3,4]. Since then, high-frequency impedance measurements mostly called "capacitively coupled contactless conductivity detection", abbreviated as C 4 D have been applied. Most of the published research is related to the detection in capillary zone electrophoresis (CE) [5][6][7][8]. The present work deals with typical geometric arrangements of the detection electrodes. There are some other works, which investigated the influence of the electrode width and distance already [9,10]. New in this work is a high wall thickness of the isolating tube, which is necessary for the application at the CHTS-plant (Continuous Hydrothermal Synthesis) in the laboratory and the use of cerium nitrate as electrolyte. The CHTS-process deals with near-or supercritical water [11]. Furthermore, this paper evaluates the influences of cell geometry, frequency, tube wall thickness and the concentration of Ce(NO 3 ) 3 on the impedance. Therefore, the aim of this work is to increase the distinguishability of cerium nitrate concentration by means of impedance by optimizing the aforementioned influencing factors. Finally, this work shows a possibility for an indirect concentration measurement method in flowing systems. This concentration measurement makes it possible to determine the residual concentration after the reaction in order to be able to estimate the conversion of the reaction. Figure 1a represents a simplified electric equivalent circuit and Figure 1b a schematic picture of the used impedance cell. The measurement principle is based on an applied alternating voltage at high frequencies at the working electrode. At the counter electrode the interaction of the alternating electrical field with the electrolyte is monitored in the form of an impedance signal. At this test setup, the two electrodes were separated from the electrolyte by a thick alumina tube, which is like a dielectric layer and represents two capacitors. In Figure 1a the two capacitors are combined to one Constant Phase Element (CPE cpl ) according to Kirchhoff's law. The capacitance of this Constant Phase Element is depended predominantly on the permittivity and thickness of the dielectric layer. Due to the less than ideal smooth surface of the tubes, a CPE is used for these capacities. The electrical behavior of the electrolyte are described by a parallel combination of the capacity and the resistance of the electrolyte. The capacity of the electrolyte is not ideal, therefore a constant phase element (CPE m ) instead of a ideal capacitor is used. Another part of the electrical energy is a stray (parasitic) capacitance C x , which is represented in the equivalent circuit with the capacitor C x , parallel to the main path. To avoid the effect of stray capacitance, there is often a shielding foil between the electrodes [12,13]. The analytical equation for the impedance of the equivalent circuit contained all impedances of each part. In general, the impedance (Z) is given by equation:

Basic Theoretical Considerations
where the resistance R represents the real part and it is a function of the electrical conductivity of the electrolyte and the cell geometry. There are several factors influencing the imaginary part (X), which occurs, for example, in capacitors or inductors. These are on the one hand the geometry of the electrodes and on the other hand the relative permittivities of the electrolyte and likewise of the dielectric layer. Furthermore, the imaginary part depends on the frequency of the alternating input signal. Here, i is the imaginary unit. In fact, there are many influencing factors on the behavior of the impedance cell and all of them affects each other. Therefore, it is necessary to consider all these parameters combined when investigating the behavior of an impedance cell. It is also important to determine the best cell geometry for the contactless conductivity detection. In this case, the resistance term (R m ) has to predominate, otherwise if the capacitance dominate, it is a dielectrometrical measurement [14]. The impedance of the electric equivalent circuit in Figure 1a can be given, considering Kirchhoff's law as: CPE cpl represents the two coupled capacitors of the electrodes (Figure 1b). CPE m is the capacitive impedance of the electrolyte and R m is the resistance of the electrolyte. C x is the parasitic capacitance. Due to these definitions and the definitions of each impedance equation, Equation (2) transforms to Equation (3), with Q 1 , α 1 as parameters of CPE m and Q 2 and α 2 as parameters of CPE cpl : In the literature, tubular electrode geometries are studied most thoroughly so far [10,15]. It is proven, that the parameter R m in Equation (3) can be expressed as: and if α of the CPE cpl is close to one, the CPE cpl becomes an ideal capacitance C cpl .
In Equation (4) R m depends on the specific conductance κ, the length of the tubular cell l (see Figure 1b) and the inner radi r i of the tube. C cpl in Equation (5) represents the capacitance of the tubular detection cell and is calculated with the inner (r i ) and outer (r o ) radii of the tube, the length of the electrodes w and the relative permittivity r of the tube material. For this work, it is important to understand the relationship between the impedance and the concentration of the electrolyte. In Equations (1)-(5) it can be seen that only in Equation (4) a resistance depends on a parameter of the fluid, the specific conductivity. This increases, up to certain limits with an increase in salt concentration, because the salt in water dissociates to the respective ions and these conduct the electric current better. As a result, the conductivity of the electrolyte will increase at higher concentrations, or the resistance will decrease.
The phase angle (θ) indicates the delay from the voltage to the current in the AC circuit. An ideal capacitance has an angle of −90 • and an ideal ohmic resistance has a phase angle of 0 • . The phase angle can be calculated with Equation (6). Since the impedance measurement and the phase shift are measured in the impedance measurement, Equation (6) can be used to determine the real and imaginary parts. Deeper theory should be looked up here a more relevant technical literature, as [16].

Principle of Operation
The proposed current concentration measurement method of a flowing salt mixture is based on the change of molar conductivity at different concentrations. Here, the change in impedance of a salt solution is used to infer its concentration.

Fitting Procedure
Data fitting were made with the "ZView" ® Version 3.5f. The equivalent circuit of Figure 1a) is used in the "ZView" program. The initial values of the individual parameters for the fit were estimated using the measured value of the capacitance, the impedance and Equations (4) and (5).

Setup and Procedure
The results were obtained in a small test setup ( Figure 2). The solution, which is measured, is presented in a beaker and the opening of the beaker is covered with a PARAFILM ® "M" (Bemis, Chicago, IL, USA) sealing film to avoid evaporation effects during the measurement. This solution is transported by an ISMATEC MC-MS CA4/6 (ISMATEC, Wertheim, Germany) peristaltic pump through the ceramic reactor in a circuit. In this testing setup, a DEGUSSIT AL23 (KYOCERA, Mannheim, Germany) tube, made of alumina with an outer diameter of 3 mm and an inner diameter of 1.6 mm served as the reactor. Furthermore, two different glass tubes (Hilgenberg, Malsfeld, Germany) with an outer diameter of 2 mm and an inner diameter of 1 mm or 1.6 mm were used for the investigation of the influence of the wall thickness. During measurement the testing solution is stirred by an IDL MEA30 magnetic stirrer (IDL, Nidderau, Germany). The electrodes are glued on the outer wall of the ceramic tube and electrically connected with the HIOKI IM3536 LCR-Meter (HIOKI E.E. Corporation, Ueda, Japan). The used schematic measuring cell is depicted in Figure 1b. This type of tubular cells are common for flowing systems [3,17]. The whole setup is placed in a Faraday cage. Two measuring methods are used: frequency sweep measurement and interval measurement at one specific frequency. First, sweep measurements were performed to determine the influence of frequency and salt concentration on the impedance. The frequency was varied from 1000 Hz to 8 MHz and repeated several times for each concentration. The concentration of the cerium nitrate solution was increased from zero (pure deionized water) to one mol/L. The different concentration levels are shown in Table 1. Furthermore, tube-material, electrode-material, electrode distance and the electrode area are varied. Table 2 shows the different used electrode configuration. Based on these measurements, the frequency for the interval measurements was localized. At this measurements the change of the impedance are determined by variation of the concentration. For the interval measurement, 5 mL of pure deionized water was used as a template and then 1 mL of a certain concentration was added every minute. An exemplary titration process is shown in Table 3. The addition of the solution was realized with a 1000 µl Eppendorf Pipette (Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany). The used water is a HPLC specific water from FISHER CHEMICAL (Fisher Scientific, Schwerte, Germany) and the used cerium nitrate was ordered from Carl Roth (Cer(III)-nitrate hexahydrate, Karlsruhe, Germany). The used ceria nanoparticles were obtained at Merck (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany). The error for the different concentrations levels of cerium nitrate, depicted in Table 1 and the error for the titration process (Table 3) is calculated according to Gaussian error propagation.   Figure 3 represents the behavior of the equivalent circuit from Figure 1. For the evaluation of Equation (3), following values are used: CPE cpl = 5.775 · 10 −11 F, α cpl = 0.75023 Q m = 1.029 · 10 −15 F, α m = 0.54822, C x = 6.986 · 10 −14 F and R m = 1.0646 · 10 7 Ω. These values were obtained from fits of experimental data measuring water for electrode design Geo9 (see. Table 2 Geo9). The impedance modulus courses feature one region, were the influence of R m is measurable. If the resistance decrease (R m /10), the flattened region moves to higher frequencies and the impedance is lower than R m . If the resistance increase (R m · 10), the flattened region moves to lower frequencies and the impedance at this region is higher than R m . The same behavior is shown by the phase angle θ. With increasing values of R m , the minimum of the phase angle shifts to lower frequencies and the value of the phase angle at the minimum increases. The changing phase minimum follows from the use of a CPE instead of an ideal capacitor in the equivalent circuit. Furthermore, it can be seen in Figure 3 that the phase minimum maps exactly to the frequency at which the impedance has the lowest slope. This is due to the fact that in the range in which R m dominates over the capacitance, the phase angle must approach zero, since a pure ohmic resistance has a phase angle of 0. A pure ideal capacitance, on the other hand, has a phase angle of −90 and thus a small influence on the capacitance. This modeling shows the high ability to distinguish different concentrations of electrolytes with the described measuring cell, because of the decreasing resistance of the electrolyte by increasing concentration. For this calculation, the assumption was made that the capacitance of water and electrolyte is constant and equal, because of the constant electrode design. This does not correspond to reality but this assumption is considered practical. The focus for this examination is on the frequency range where the conductivity of the solution dominates over the capacitance, to distinguish different electrolyte concentrations. Therefore, the frequency range where the capacitance dominates can be neglected.  . Impedance over frequency for deionized water (a) and cerium nitrate (b) with different electrode geometries, which are mentioned in Table 2.

Fit and Modelling
This nine electrode designs are different in the electrode distance and electrode width. The designs one to three have the same electrode width (5 mm) and the electrode distance doubles twice from 5 to 10 and to 20 mm. Designs four to six have a electrode width of 10 mm and distances of 5, 10 and 20 mm. Similar to this, designs seven to nine have a electrode width of 20 mm and distances of 5, 10 and 20 mm, as mentioned in Table 2. In the first linear decreasing part the electrode width predominates compared to the electrode distance. This is evident because the impedance of Geo1-3 lie on top of each other. The same applies to Geo4-6 and Geo7-9. In the second part, the flattening one, however, the impedance lie on top of each other, which have the same electrode distances. In the third sloping part, the impedance with the same electrode widths lie on top of each other. In addition, two further statements about the influence of electrode spacing and width can be made here. First, the larger the electrode spacing, the more the curve flattens in the middle part. This means, concerning to the equivalent circuit, that the influence of the capacitance (CPE m ) decreases in comparison to the resistance of the liquid (R m ) and is therefore better suited to determine the resistance or the conductivity of the liquid. Secondly, it can be seen that with a larger electrode width, the middle part shifts to lower frequencies and the frequency span becomes larger. This has the advantage that a wider frequency range is available for the measurements. The right diagram (b) with the cerium nitrate solution is similar to the curves of water, with small differences. The overall impedance changes in all three parts. In the flattening part, the overall impedance is lower than that of water by more than a factor of 10. This is due to the fact that in this part the ohmic resistance R m predominates over the capacitance. By increasing the conductivity of the fluid, which was achieved here by increasing or adding the cerium nitrate salt, R m decreases according to Equation (4) and thus the overall impedance according to Equation (3) also decreases. Another point to add is, that the flattened part shifts to higher frequencies for cerium nitrate compared to water. The falling first and third part of the curve is not relevant for further consideration and is therefore not described further here. Figure 5 shows the influence of the electrode design on the distinguishability of differently concentrated cerium nitrate solutions. The left (a) diagram represents the smallest investigated electrode design Geo1 with 5 mm distance and 5 mm width. The right diagram (b) shows the biggest investigated electrode design Geo9 with 20 mm distance and 20 mm width. The impedance of Geo1 to Geo9 changes in different ways. As long as the course of the impedance decreases linearly, in this double logarithmic diagram, the impedance of Geo9 is smaller than that of Geo1. This is due to the fact that the electrode width of Geo9 increases in comparison to Geo1, which according to Equation (5) leads to an increase of CPE cpl and thus to a reduction of the impedance Z. On the other hand, in the flattening region where R m dominates over capacitance, the impedance of Geo9 is higher than that of Geo1. This is due to the increase in the total cell length l, which was achieved in Geo9 by increasing the electrode distance and width. This increases the resistance R m and leads to a higher overall impedance. This curve can be observed not only for water, but also for all other salt concentrations. The difference is that the flattening section shifts to higher frequencies with increasing salt concentration or decreasing resistance. This is due to the frequency dependence of the capacitive resistances which tend towards infinity at a frequency of zero and towards zero for a frequency of infinity. Another difference between Geo1 and Geo9 is, that the flattened part of the course is bigger for all differently concentrations and started at lower frequencies at Geo9 than at Geo1. In addition, it can be observed that the impedance of the cerium nitrate solutions at Geo1 overlie or even cross each other over a large frequency range, making it impossible to distinguish the individual concentrations. Only the concentration of 0.001 mol/L and water can be distinguished between a frequency of about 100 kHz and 1 MHz. However, since in this range also the high concentrations around 1 mol/L intersect the range it is important to know the initial maximum concentration to be able to measure a change of the concentration later. In comparison with Geo9, however, this phenomenon of crossing and overlapping the impedance of cerium nitrate solutions occurs at lower frequencies. This, and the wider flat part of the impedance, resulting in better discrimination between concentrations over a wider frequency range. However, again, the initial concentration must be known. Furthermore, it can be observed with Geo9 that the distinguishability between the concentration curves shown here is shifted to higher frequencies with increasing concentration. In comparison to the calculated equivalent circuit (Figure 3) there is a difference at lower frequencies. In the measurements, pure deionized water and the cerium nitrate salt solution have not the same impedance at low frequencies, but if the difference between water and the salt solution is only in the conductance, the impedance shout be equal like in the calculation. However, there is a difference between water and the salt solutions and moreover there are small differences between the salt solutions with different concentrations at Geo9 and bigger differences at Geo1. This follows from the ideal assumption, as already discussed above. This point shows, that the capacity of the electrolyte (CPE m ) has also an influence on the behavior of the impedance. Nevertheless, the capacity influence is negligible at the focused frequency-range, where the resistance predominate. The same differences between measurement and calculation were observed from Blume et. al. [18] for a KCl-solution before. Therefore it's necessary to know the frequency-range for each cell geometry in which the resistance of the fluid predominates. Figure 6 shows the impedance versus concentration for Geo1 and Geo9. This are the same measurements as in Figure 5 at 8 MHz. The dots are the measured impedance and the line are the fitted impedance. As can be seen here, a continuous curve of impedance as a function of concentration can be generated with a few sweep measurements. This has the advantage that a reference curve can be prepared with a few measurements in order to determine the concentration by means of impedance in subsequent titration experiments.  Table 4. In summary, the following statements can be made about the two influencing variables of the electrodes (width and distance).

•
The larger the electrode width, the more distinguishable is the measurement at lower concentrations for cerium nitrate. • Higher distances between the electrodes lead to more distinguishable measurements at lower concentrations and till higher concentrations.
Based on these findings, the most accurate results up to very high concentrations should be obtained with the largest possible electrodes having a large distance. This diagram shows that the measurements are reproducible at concentrations above 0.05 mol/L. Each measuring point at Figure 7 shows the average of one minute of measuring which includes about 60 measuring points and the error bars are really close (≈0.1-0.6%). By the aspect, that the impedance measurement at lower concentration are more sensitive it is not aberrant that the differences between each measurement are higher than at high concentrations. A deviation had to be assumed due to measurement inaccuracies, mainly errors during titration and preparation of the batch. It should be emphasized that the impedance values of the sweep measurements are fairly close to the titration values (Table 5). Therefore, in order to determine the concentration of a flowing salt solution, it is important to create a calibration line first. Similar to the left diagram, the black squares and red circles at the right diagram represents the same titration procedure. The green and yellow triangles show a different titration procedure to illustrate the behavior for bigger concentration ranges. With different titration procedures, the same impedance values are obtained for the respective concentrations. Therefore, it is irrelevant whether the concentration increases or decreases, the impedance value for the respective concentrations is the same. The calibration measurements for reactor Geo10 has small differences to the titration measurement at high concentrations and higher differences at lower concentrations ( Table 6). The error bars follow this observation. After adding of solution to the testing volume, a sudden increase of the concentration leads to the larger error bars at the individual measuring points in case of high sensitivity at low concentrations. By stirring the solution, a stable measurement signal is obtained after a few seconds. The relative concentration change is smaller at high concentrations compared to low concentrations, thus the error bars are smaller at high concentrations.   Figure 8 shows the influence of the product of the CHTS-process (ceria nanoparticles) on the impedance. Water is compared with a water-ceria-suspension (CeO 2 ) and a cerium nitrate solution with the suspension of the cerium nitrate solution and CeO 2 . In addition, the difference in distinguishability for two different cell geometries (Geo1, Geo9) is shown. No differences between water and the corresponding suspension of water and ceria can be observed, either for the geometry on the left side nor on the right side. In Geo9, moreover, no influence of a higher concentration of CeO 2 nanoparticles is visible. This statement can also be made for the cerium nitrate suspension and the cerium nitrate solution. This corresponds to the intensity of the measurement. By adding a metal oxide nanoparticle to water or to a metal salt solution, the conductivity of the solution or suspension should not change, since the oxide does not dissociate into ions. In addition, it is well known that ceramics with their ionic bonds act as electrical insulators. The errors of the measurement between the solutions and the suspensions depend on the frequencies which are maximum ±4%. For this purpose, the measurements of the suspensions were normalized with the measurements of the solutions. As mentioned before, larger electrode areas leads to smaller impedances, a bigger frequency-range to distinguish different salt concentrations and the ability to use smaller frequencies for the measurement, like Geo9 compared to Geo1. This observation allows with defined reactant concentration to determine the conversion of the reaction by measuring the residual concentration of the salt, because the ceria nanoparticles do not change the impedance. Thus, this method has the ability to immediately, continuously and directly determine the reaction conversion in the plant. Furthermore, embedded in a control loop it would be possible to control the conversion by varying the process parameters. This eliminate the need for chemical analysis of the product.

Measurements with Glass Tubes as Reactor
The aforementioned results were generated with alumina tubes. Figure 9 compares two different wall thicknesses of glass tubes. Glass tubes were used for the variation of the wall thickness, because no alumina tubes are commercially available in which the outer diameter is constant and the inner diameter, i.e., the wall thickness, is varied. The wall thickness of the used tube has a great influence on the behavior of the measuring cell, because of the change in the capacity CPE cpl in Equation (3). The diagram (a) and (b) shows the behavior of the measuring cell with a glass thickness of 0.2 mm and measuring cell (c) and (d) represents a wall thickness of 0.5 mm. The two diagrams (a) and (c) differ in so far as, with increasing wall thickness the overall impedance increase, which can be explained with Equation (5). With increasing of r i and a constant value of r o , the capacitance CPE cpl is also increasing and the overall impedance decreases corresponding to Equation (3). An other difference is the distinctness of concentrations of Ce(NO 3 ) 3 solutions. There is a bigger gap between each course at diagram (a) at high frequencies, than at diagram (c). Therefore, the distinctness of concentrations at high frequencies increases with decreasing wall-thickness [19,20]. However, a disadvantage at high frequencies is, that there is no difference of the impedance values at lower concentrations between pure water and 0.001 mol/L. The biggest difference between the impedance values at low concentrations shifts to lower frequencies. The diagrams (b) and (d) shows, at the left Y-axes normalized impedance and at the right Y-axes phase shift, two measurements of the corresponding glass-tube-reactor from diagram (a) and (c). Here, the Ce(NO 3 ) 3 solution with the concentration of 0.001 mol/L is normalized by the water spectrum. In order to this, the Ce(NO 3 ) 3 solution with the concentration of 0.005 mol/L is normalized by the cerium nitrate solution of 0.001 mol/L. Through this normalization, a minimum is obtained which represents the maximum difference in impedance between two concentration solutions. The frequency at which this maximum difference occurs is also the frequency at which the phase difference between the respective concentrations becomes zero. This makes it possible to determine a suitable frequency at which the difference in impedance is maximized and the discrimination between the individual concentrations is also maximized. For example, the example in Figure 9 shows that a change in concentration from zero to 0.001 mol/L of cerium nitrate is most appropriately measured at a frequency of about 1.5 · 10 5 Hz, while a change in concentration from 0.001 to 0.005 mol/L is most appropriately determined at a frequency of 1 · 10 6 Hz. In order to a continuous measurement for a large concentration range, it is necessary to use more than one frequency to get high distinguishability for the hole concentrations range. To sum up, thin wall thicknesses are more suitable for the indirect concentration measurements of electrolytes with a C 4 D-Sensor, because of the higher distinguishability. Another factor influencing the overall impedance is the electrical permittivity, as can be seen in Equation (5). Therefore, two different electrode geometries are shown in Figure 10a,b, using an alumina tube as a reactor. As shown in Table 2, the outer diameter of the alumina tubes is 3 mm, which is larger than the outer diameter of the glass tubes, which is 2 mm. In addition, the wall thickness of 0.2 mm and 0.5 mm is smaller for the glass tubes than for the alumina tubes with 0.7 mm. Since there are no glass tubes with the same dimensions as the aluminum oxide tubes and vice versa commercially available, not optimal comparisons are used here. Nevertheless, the influence on the overall impedance of the permittivity can be obtained from this. In Figure 9, it can be observed that a lower wall thickness lowers the impedance and increases the distinguishability of the individual electrolyte solutions. In Figure 10c the electrode geometries of Geo4, Geo7 and GT0.5 are compared for water. All three have an electrode spacing of 5 mm. As shown in Section 4.2.1, the three curves therefore overlap in the middle frequency range, since the conductivity of the water outweighs the capacitance here. Due to the different electrode areas, the curves do not overlap in the low and high frequency range. The impedance curve of the GT0.5 glass tube shows three different parameters in contrast to the aluminum oxide tubes. The wall thickness of the glass tube, the electrode area and the permittivity. Geo4 should have a significantly higher impedance in the low and high frequency range due to the higher wall thickness and the smaller electrode area. However, this cannot be seen. Due to the higher permittivity of alumina (8-10 at 1 MHz) in contrast to glass (4-8 at 1 MHz), the impedance drops in these two frequency ranges and is comparable to GT0.5. This shows the influence of the permittivity of the material of the insulation tube on the impedance. This can also be understood by means of Equations (3) and (5).  Table 2 and different tube materials. Black square, glass tube are used, red circles and green triangle alumina tube are used.

Conclusions
In this work, a possible method for determining the concentration of cerium nitrate in a flowing system using impedance spectroscopy and the application of C 4 D Sensors was described. For this purpose, the influences of the electrode distance and -width, as well as the wall thickness of the tube and the material of the tube on the impedance were investigated. It was found that with a larger electrode width and a larger electrode distance, the distinguishability of individual cerium nitrate concentrations increases. In addition, the maximum difference in impedance between two different salt concentrations was found to shift to higher frequencies with increasing concentration. It has also been shown that a reduction in the wall thickness of the tube leads to higher discrimination, as does the use of glass instead of aluminum oxide as an insulating material. In this work, with electrodes of 20 mm width and 20 mm spacing, cerium nitrate could be distinguished in a frequency range of 1 · 10 5 -8 · 10 6 Hz in a concentration of 0-1 mol/L. Therefore, the impedance spectroscopy combined with C 4 D Sensors is a powerful method to determine concentration changes in flowing systems. In this case, it could be a possible method to detect chemical reactions in continuous processes, especially for the continuous hydrothermal syntheses, which were developed in this research project [21].

Conflicts of Interest:
The authors declare no conflict of interest.