If you're looking for the distinguishing characteristics of a "Senior" vs. "non-Senior" engineer, I'd focus on what I'd expect from such a person. Here are some example questions that I might ask. Note that they assume that the person is already a "senior": I like to drive the conversation in a positive way and assume the best (until I smell blood in the water...).
- A senior engineer is a leader. What technical leadership are you showing in your current position? How is that going? What are the challenges there? What would you have done differently?
- A senior engineer is a teacher and mentor. Who are you currently mentoring? How could you improve your mentoring abilities? Is that a fun part of your job?
- A senior engineer is expected to be an expert. Where are you currently working to improve your expertise? Tell me about something that you have done that you thought was an impressive accomplishment. Hey, it sounds like you could have done [X] differently, why did you make that choice? Are you sure about that rationale? What if you had to scale large / scale small / deal with heat problems / work underwater / etc.?
My point with the third set is that the technical questions tend to be person-specific. It's very hard to line up useful questions ahead of time (unless you have a very specific set of technical capabilities).
On the other hand, the people-parts of the questions are much more interesting to me: I want to know about how this person would work with the rest of the team. Most importantly, why should I hire them when I could use that money to buy new monitors for the whole team. I don't care if they can type code really fast: how are they going to make the team better so we can (a) get our work done well and on time and (b) go the hell home and be ready to do it again tomorrow!