| Literature DB >> 31252550 |
Christian Broadway1, Damien Kinet2, Antreas Theodosiou3, Kyriacos Kalli3, Andrei Gusarov4, Christophe Caucheteur2, Patrice Mégret2.
Abstract
We present a polymer fibre Bragg grating sensor and its sensitivity to gamma radiation by observing the reflected spectral profile. The Bragg grating is femtosecond inscribed within a perfluorinated CYTOP fibre and the alteration of the Bragg wavelength corresponds to the total radiation dose received. Over a total dose of 41 k Gy, the fibre demonstrates a sensitivity of - 26.2 p m / k Gy and a resolution of 40 Gy. Under active consideration for the instrumentation of nuclear waste repositories, this study gives a better understanding of the effects of gamma radiation upon Bragg gratings in CYTOP fibres.Entities:
Keywords: fibre Bragg gratings; gamma radiation; polymer optical fibres
Year: 2019 PMID: 31252550 PMCID: PMC6651103 DOI: 10.3390/s19132853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Spectral profile of the CYTOP FBG within the test container.
Figure 2Dose distribution of gamma radiation over the container kGy/h (Left). Custom mount, with the CYTOP fibre placed on the 6th level (Right).
Figure 3Physical changes in CYTOP fibre after 120 gamma radiation, illuminated using a 632 nm light source.
Figure 4Spectral profile changes under gamma radiation.
Figure 5Amplitude degradation of the Bragg wavelength in CYTOP (blue), linear fit for first section (red) and cubic fit for the second section (yellow).
Figure 6Amplitude changes for the deformation on a connection joint in the CYTOP fibre (A); state of a coupling joint after 120 kGy of radiation (B); and state of a pristine coupling joint under mechanical deformation (C).
Figure 7CYTOP FBG Bragg wavelength shift due to Gamma radiation (blue), linear fit for first section (red), and linear fit for second section (yellow).