| Literature DB >> 28561748 |
Ting Wu1, Rui Tong2, Liwen Liao3, Lihui Huang4, Shilong Zhao5, Shiqing Xu6.
Abstract
Er3+/Yb3+ codoped tellurite-zinc-niobium (TZNb) glass was prepared by the melt-quenching method and used for the construction of a point all-fiber temperature sensor. The glass thermal stability and network structural properties were studied by differential thermal analysis and Raman spectrum, respectively. High glass transition temperature is beneficial to widen the working temperature range. The dependence of fluorescence intensity ratio (FIR) of green upconversion emissions on the surrounding temperature from 276 to 363 K was experimentally investigated and the maximum temperature sensitivity is 95 × 10-4 K-1 at 363 K. Strong green upconversion emission, broad temperature measurement range and high sensitivity indicate this point temperature sensor is a promising optical device for application on optical temperature sensing.Entities:
Keywords: tellurite-zinc-niobium glass; temperature sensing; upconversion emission
Year: 2017 PMID: 28561748 PMCID: PMC5492101 DOI: 10.3390/s17061253
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Schematic diagram of experimental arrangement used for optical fiber temperature sensing. The upper right corner presents the strong green upconversion emission at a power of 1 mW.
Basic physical parameters of Er3+/Yb3+ codoped TZNb glass
| Physical Parameters | Refractive Index (at 632.8 nm) | Density (g/cm3) | Δ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value | 2.0329 | 5.082 | 683 | 875 | 188 |
Figure 2(a) The XRD pattern of TZNb glass; (b) Raman spectrum of undoped TZNb glass.
Figure 3Upconversion luminescence of Er3+/Yb3+ doped TZNb glass. The inset shows the simple energy levels of Er3+ and Yb3+ ions and the possible upconversion mechanism in TZNb glass.
Figure 4Effect of temperature on upconversion emissions in the Er3+/Yb3+ doped TZNb glass.
Figure 5FIR of upconversion emission band as a function of temperature ranging from276 to 363 K.
Figure 6The experimental temperature sensitivity as a function of temperature ranging from 276 to 363 K.
Optical temperature sensing performance in the different Er3+ doped host matrices. The dopant, excitation power, maximum sensitivity, and the corresponding temperature are included.
| Materials | Dopant | Excitation Power | Maximum Sensitivity (K‒1) | Temperature (K) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lead germinate glass | Er-Yb | / | 70 × 10−4 | 550 | [ |
| Fluorotellurite glass | Er | 5 W/mm2 | 79 × 10−4 | 541 | [ |
| Tungsten–tellurite glass | Er-Yb | 108 mW | 28 × 10−4 | 690 | [ |
| Tellurite glass | Er-Yb | 0.3 mW | 39 × 10−4 | / | [ |
| Al2O3 | Er-Yb-Mo | 2 mW | 51 × 10−4 | 443 | [ |
| Fluorophosphate glass | Er | / | 54 × 10−4 | 630 | [ |
| Yb2TiO7 | Er-Mo | 5 mW | 74 × 10−4 | 340 | [ |
| CaWO4 phosphor | Er-Yb | 150 mW | 73 × 10−4 | 518 | [ |
| β-NaLuF4 | Er-Yb | / | 52 × 10−4 | 303 | [ |
| TZNb glass | Er-Yb | 1 mW | 95 × 10−4 | 363 | This work |