In a nutshell, unless you design and engineer it inhouse, 'patents'... and the sale/maintenance cost this adds combined with limited to no verification of their accuracy in use.
Marten Silvanius
http://bth.diva-portal.org/smash/get/diva2:1470427/FULLTEXT03.pdf sums it up nicely "Canisters are usually of radial or axial design and from a design perspective it becomes easier to monitor an axial scrubber as the area of heat is more concentrated.
Today there are mainly two carbon dioxide scrubbers with heat monitoring available. One is designed and patented by Dan Warkander and manufactured by rEvo rebreathers, Bruges Belgium, whereas the other one is designed, patented and manufactured by AP Diving, Water-Ma-Trout U.K.
Both these are evaluated in paper I. It is shown that surface testing could cause the CO2-exothermic heat monitor prediction of scrubber life-time to be deceiving; however at depth they become more reliable."
Both above examples are from axial scrubbers, though you can do thermal front monitoring with EACs as well...