| Literature DB >> 23787726 |
Ran Wang1, Jianquan Yao, Yinping Miao, Ying Lu, Degang Xu, Nannan Luan, Mayilamu Musideke, Liangcheng Duan, Congjing Hao.
Abstract
In this paper, a reflective photonic crystal fiber (PCF) sensor probe for temperature measurement has been demonstrated both theoretically and experimentally. The performance of the device depends on the intensity modulation of the optical signal by liquid mixtures infiltrated into the air holes of commercial LMA-8 PCFs. The effective mode field area and the confinement loss of the probe are both proved highly temperature-dependent based on the finite element method (FEM). The experimental results show that the reflected power exhibits a linear response with a temperature sensitivity of about 1 dB/°C. The sensor probe presents a tunable temperature sensitive range due to the concentration of the mixture components. Further research illustrates that with appropriate mixtures of liquids, the probe could be developed as a cryogenic temperature sensor. The temperature sensitivity is about 0.75 dB/°C. Such a configuration is promising for a portable, low-power and all-in-fiber device for temperature or refractive index monitoring in chemical or biosensing applications.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23787726 PMCID: PMC3715230 DOI: 10.3390/s130607916
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.The image of LMA-8 cross section from field emission scanning electron microscopy.
Figure 2.The simulated distributions of LMA-8 PCF fundamental modes with the volume ratio of chloroform and ethanol as 9:1, (a) at 0 °C , (b) at 20 °C .
Figure 3.The confinement loss and effective mode area as functions of temperature.
Figure 4.Scheme of the experimental setup for the LMA-8 PCF sensor probe.
Figure 5.Theoretical and experimental loss (a) and linear fitting curves of the experimental loss (b) as functions of temperature with the volume ratio of chloroform and ethanol as 9:1.
Figure 6.Theoretical and experimental loss (a) and linear fitting curves of the experimental loss (b) as functions of temperature with pure chloroform.
Figure 7.The experimental total loss and linear-fitting curve as functions of temperature in the ultralow range with a 3:7 volume ratio of toluene and ethanol.