| Literature DB >> 25923934 |
Antonio Bueno1, Driss Lahem2, Christophe Caucheteur3, Marc Debliquy4.
Abstract
In this paper, an NO2 optical fiber sensor is presented for pollution monitoring in road traffic applications. This sensor exploits the simultaneous transmission of visible light, as a measurement signal, and UV light, for the recovery of the NO2 sensitive materials. The sensor is based on a multimode fiber tip coated with a thin film of lutetium bisphthalocyanine (LuPc2). The simultaneous injection of UV light through the fiber is an improvement on the previously developed NO2 sensors and allows the simplification of the sensor head, rendering the external UV illumination of the film unnecessary. Coatings of different thicknesses were deposited on the optical fiber tips and the best performance was obtained for a 15 nm deposited thickness, with a sensitivity of 5.02 mV/ppm and a resolution of 0.2 ppb in the range 0-5 ppm. The response and recovery times are not dependent on thickness, meaning that NO2 does not diffuse completely in the films.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25923934 PMCID: PMC4481967 DOI: 10.3390/s150509870
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Molecular structure of lutetium bisphthalocyanine (LuPc2).
Figure 2Absorbance spectra of pure LuPc2 thin films (a) whole spectra; (b) zoom on 660 nm.
Figure 3Experimental setup for NO2 measurements.
Figure 4Response of a 15 nm thickness sensor without and with UV light illumination.
Figure 5Response of the optical fiber sensors to different NO2 concentrations.
Figure 6Calibration of the optical fiber sensors with NO2 concentration.
Characterization of the sensors depending on their thicknesses.
| Sensibility | Resolution | Response time | Recovery Time | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 nm | 5.02 mV/ppm | 0.2 ppb | 25 min | 38 min |
| 30 nm | 3.25 mV/ppm | 0.3 ppb | 27 min | 35 min |
| 45 nm | 1.15 mV/ppm | 0.9 ppb | 27 min | 40 min |
Figure 7Repeatability performance for the 15 nm thickness NO2 optical fiber sensor.
Figure 8Sensor representation (a) before and (b) after NO2 exposure.