| Literature DB >> 29352215 |
Yinlan Ruan1, David A Simpson2, Jan Jeske3, Heike Ebendorff-Heidepriem1, Desmond W M Lau4, Hong Ji1, Brett C Johnson5, Takeshi Ohshima6, Shahraam Afshar V1,7, Lloyd Hollenberg2,5, Andrew D Greentree4, Tanya M Monro1,7, Brant C Gibson8.
Abstract
Traditional optical fibers are insensitive to magnetic fields, however many applications would benefit from fiber-based magnetometry devices. In this work, we demonstrate a magnetically sensitive optical fiber by doping nanodiamonds containing nitrogen vacancy centers into tellurite glass fibers. The fabrication process provides a robust and isolated sensing platform as the magnetic sensors are fixed in the tellurite glass matrix. Using optically detected magnetic resonance from the doped nanodiamonds, we demonstrate detection of local magnetic fields via side excitation and longitudinal collection. This is a first step towards intrinsically magneto-sensitive fiber devices with future applications in medical magneto-endoscopy and remote mineral exploration sensing.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29352215 PMCID: PMC5775195 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-19400-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) and (b) Schematic of side pumping setup for fluorescence mapping based on a custom scanning confocal microscope. In (a), the fluorescence signal is collected from the side with a high NA objective and split into 5% and 95% for spectral and intensity measurements, respectively. In (b), the fluorescence signal is collected from the ND-doped fiber output endface using a multimode fiber that is manually connected to the spectrometer or APD for spectral and intensity measurements, respectively. F: 560 nm long-pass filter, Spec: spectrometer, APD: avalanche photodiode detector. (c) and (d) are images of the scanned ND-doped fiber plane parallel to the fiber axis. (c) was collected using the side-collection setup shown in (a), and (d) was collected using the endface-collection setup shown in (b). The same seven regions are numbered in (c) and (d), showing these points could be spatially recovered through the fiber.
Figure 2Fluorescence spectrum from ND doped tellurite fibers. (a) Comparison of the fluorescence spectra obtain from the side excitation and side (blue) and longitudinal (red) collection geometries. The NV zero phonon line (ZPL) is marked at 637 nm. (b) Spatially resolved fluorescence spectra excited from two distinct locations Region 5 and 7 from Fig. 1d and collected in the longitudinal geometry from the fiber endface.
Figure 3Optically detected magnetic resonance of ND doped tellurite fiber. (a) Experimental schematic for ODMR in the tellurite fiber. The fiber was excited from the side with green laser light at 532 nm, approximately 5 cm away from the fiber endface. The NV emission from the endface was imaged onto an sCMOS camera, as shown in (b). (c) ODMR spectra from a ∼200 µm2 region of the fiber for varying external magnetic fields. The spectra were obtained by integrating the fluorescence signal from the full field of view. The square points are measured data, and the solid lines are fitted curves. (d) Theoretical model of the off-resonant fluorescence intensity versus magnetic field. Crosses are the data extracted from (c) at 3.1 GHz.