| Literature DB >> 30261692 |
Liangcheng Duan1, Haiwei Zhang2, Wei Shi3, Xianchao Yang4, Ying Lu5, Jianquan Yao6.
Abstract
We demonstrate a high-resolution temperature sensor based on optical heterodyne spectroscopy technology by virtue of the narrow linewidth characteristic of a single-frequency fiber laser. When the single-frequency ring fiber laser has a Lorentzian-linewidth <1 kHz and the temperature sensor operates in the range of 3-85 °C, an average sensitivity of 14.74 pm/°C is obtained by an optical spectrum analyzer. Furthermore, a resolution as high as ~5 × 10-3 °C is demonstrated through optical heterodyne spectroscopy technology by an electrical spectrum analyzer in the range of 18.26⁻18.71 °C with the figure of merit up to 3.1 × 10⁵ in the experiment.Entities:
Keywords: fiber optics sensors; heterodyne spectroscopy; high resolution; single-frequency laser
Year: 2018 PMID: 30261692 PMCID: PMC6210321 DOI: 10.3390/s18103245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Experimental setup of the temperature sensor.
Figure 2(a) Scanning FPI verifying single-frequency operation spectrum; (b) Measured and fitted lineshape of the self-heterodyne signal.
Figure 3Output spectra of the single-frequency fiber laser at different temperatures.
Figure 4(a) Convolution of a narrow linewidth laser spectra translated to low frequencies; (b) Simulated heterodyne spectrum with a frequency shift of 10 kHz, corresponding to a temperature change of 5 × 10−6 °C.
Figure 5(a) Beat frequency spectra with the temperature increased from 18.26 °C to 18.71 °C; (b) Relationship between temperature and beat frequency.
Figure 6Relationship between the temperature and the wavelength of the single-frequency fiber laser.
Figure 7Beat-frequency stability of the heterodyne spectrum.
Performance comparisons of the proposed sensor with sensors referred to prior.
| Ref. | Sensing Approach | Sensitivity | Resolution (°C) | Dynamic Range (°C) | FWHM | FOM |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | PCF, passive sensing | 54.3 nm/°C | 0.027 (calculated) | 34–35.5 | 40 nm | 1.36 |
| [ | FPI, passive sensing | 84.6 pm/°C | 0.0006 | 20–100 | - | - |
| [ | FBG, passive sensing | 1228.4 MHz/°C | 0.0014 | 19–21 | 40 MHz | 30.71 |
| [ | FBG, active sensing | (1.623 ± 0.002) MHz/°C | 0.04 | 15–45 | 10 kHz | 162.5 |
| [ | FBG, active sensing | 1.32 MHz/°C | 0.05 | 10–52 | - | - |
| This paper | FBG, active sensing | 1832 MHz /°C | 0.005 | 3–85 | 6 kHz | 3.1 × 105 |