| Literature DB >> 29182527 |
Ricardo I Álvarez-Tamayo1, Manuel Durán-Sánchez2, Patricia Prieto-Cortés3, Guillermo Salceda-Delgado4, Arturo A Castillo-Guzmán5, Romeo Selvas-Aguilar6, Baldemar Ibarra-Escamilla7, Evgeny A Kuzin8.
Abstract
An all-fiber curvature laser sensor by using a novel modal interference in-fiber structure is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The in-fiber device, fabricated by fusion splicing of multimode fiber and double-clad fiber segments, is used as wavelength filter as well as the sensing element. By including a multimode fiber in an ordinary modal interference structure based on a double-clad fiber, the fringe visibility of the filter transmission spectrum is significantly increased. By using the modal interferometer as a curvature sensitive wavelength filter within a ring cavity erbium-doped fiber laser, the spectral quality factor Q is considerably increased. The results demonstrate the reliability of the proposed curvature laser sensor with advantages of robustness, ease of fabrication, low cost, repeatability on the fabrication process and simple operation.Entities:
Keywords: curvature measurement; erbium-doped fiber laser; fiber optic laser sensor; modal in-fiber interferometer
Year: 2017 PMID: 29182527 PMCID: PMC5751561 DOI: 10.3390/s17122744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the in-fiber SMDS structure.
Figure 2BPM Simulations of intensity distribution in the xz plane for: (a) used SMDS; (b) SDS structure; (c) SMDS without black paint application on the structure surface; (d) BMP simulation of the three-dimensional optical field amplitude profile of the SMDS structure at the output SMF.
Figure 3(a) Measured output signal of the ASE source, SDS and SMDS in-fiber structures; (b) transmission spectral response of the SDS and the SMDS in-fiber interferometers.
Figure 4(a) Schematic of the mechanical system for curvature application; (b) BPM simulation of the bent SMDS structure; (c) Transmission of the SMDS structure under curvature variations.
Figure 5Experimental setup of the fiber ring EDF laser curvature sensor.
Figure 6The output signal of the EDFL under curvature variations for SDS and SMDS structures used as spectral filters.
Figure 7(a) The output signal of the laser sensor based on the SMDS in-fiber structure under curvature variations; (b) laser peak wavelength and peak intensity as a function of the curvature.
Figure 8(a) The output signal of the laser sensor under temperature variations; (b) Laser peak wavelength as a function of the surrounding temperature.
Comparison between similar reported in-fiber sensors and this study.
| Ref. | Sensitivity (nm/m−1) | FWHM (nm) | Visibility (dB) | Q Value | Curvature (m−1) | Structure | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | −0.179 | 0.678 | 9.84 | 0.465 | 3.062–4.050 | Hollow core fiber (HCF) SMF + abrupt-taper joints | |
| [ | 9.6 | 14 | 14.63 | 96.3 | 0–14 | LEAF-DCF-LEAF | @1.3 µm |
| [ | −10.38 | 2 | 11.53 | 621.1 | 0–0.5 | SMF-MMF-SMF | |
| [ | −13.17 | 2.45 | 26.7 | 1891.7 | 4.8–6.33 | Two cascading abrupt-tapers in SMF | |
| [ | −22.95 | 1.471 | 24.13 | 2480.1 | 0.353–2.812 | SMF core-offset splicing | |
| [ | −2.55 | 0.073 | 46 | 4097.4 | 1.231–1.459 | Four core fiber (FCF) between SMF | Laser sensor |
| [ | −22.33 | 0.06 | 42 | 349040 | 0.212–0.346 | No-core fiber (NCF) between SMF | Laser sensor |
| This paper | −8.156 | 0.251 | 43.85 | 11621.7 | 0–1.523 | SMF-MMF-DCF-SMF | Laser sensor |