A Salinity-Temperature Sensor Based on Microwave Resonance Reflection

Sensors (Basel). 2022 Aug 8;22(15):5915. doi: 10.3390/s22155915.

Abstract

We developed and tested a microwave in situ salinity sensor (MiSSo) to simultaneously measure salinity and temperature within the same water sample over broad ranges of salinity (S) (3−50 psu) and temperature (T) (3−30 °C). Modern aquatic S sensors rely on measurements of conductivity (C) between a set of electrodes contained within a small volume of water. To determine water salt content or S, conductivity, or C, measurements must be augmented with concurrent T measurements from the same water volume. In practice, modern S sensors do not sample C and T within the same volume, resulting in the S determination characterized by measurement artifacts. These artifacts render processing vast amounts of available C and T data to derive S time-consuming and generally preclude automated processing. Our MiSSo approach eliminates the need for an additional T sensor, as it permits us to concurrently determine the sample S and T within the same water volume. Laboratory trials demonstrated the MiSSo accuracy of S and T measurements to be <0.1 psu and <0.1 °C, respectively, when using microwave reflections at 11 distinct frequencies. Each measurement took 0.1 μs. Our results demonstrate a new physical method that permits the accurate S and T determination within the same water volume.

Keywords: aquatic salinity measurements; aquatic temperature measurements; environmental monitoring.

MeSH terms

  • Electric Conductivity
  • Microwaves*
  • Salinity*
  • Temperature
  • Water

Substances

  • Water