| Literature DB >> 35808196 |
Hui Zhang1, Yi Li1, Zhuo Zhang1, Chaoming Yang1, Mingshan Liang1, Yong Hu2, Heming Wei2, Fufei Pang2.
Abstract
A diaphragm-based hermetic optical fiber Fabry-Pérot (FP) cavity is proposed and demonstrated for pressure sensing. The FP cavity is hermetically sealed using one-step CO2 laser welding with a cavity length from 30 to 100 μm. A thin diaphragm is formed by polishing the hermetic FP cavity for pressure sensing. The fabricated FP cavity has a fringe contrast larger than 15 dB. The experimental results show that the fabricated device has a linear response to the change in pressure, with a sensitivity of -2.02 nm/MPa in the range of 0 to 4 MPa. The results demonstrate that the proposed fabrication technique can be used for fabricating optical fiber microcavities for sensing applications.Entities:
Keywords: CO2 laser welding; Fabry–Pérot cavity; optical fiber sensor; pressure sensing
Year: 2022 PMID: 35808196 PMCID: PMC9269120 DOI: 10.3390/s22134700
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Figure 1Diaphragm-based pressure sensor: (a) The structure of the sensor; (b) interference principle of the FP cavity.
Figure 2The physical model of the pressure senor. (a) The status of the pressure sensor under 4 MPa; (b) the deformation of the diaphragm center with pressure.
Figure 3The simulated reflective spectrum of the sensor under different pressures. (a) The blue-shifted tendency when increasing the pressure from 0 to 4 MPa; (b) dip wavelength variation with increasing pressure.
Figure 4Fabrication of the diaphragm-based FP pressure sensor. (a–d) Steps of sensor fabrication; (e) the sensor’s graph under a microscope; (f) the reflection spectrum of the pressure sensor.
Figure 5Micrographs of the sensing cavity welded by a CO2 laser for one time. (a) The cavity length was set at 30 μm; (b) 50 μm; (c) 70 μm; (d) 100 μm; (e) 110 μm with an increase in the welding power of the CO2 laser; (f) 110 μm with an increase in the welding time of the CO2 laser.
Figure 6Schematic diagram of the experimental system for the pressure test experiment.
Figure 7The reflection spectrum of the sensor under different pressures. (a) The spectrum shifting trend during rising pressure; (b) the three rounds’ sensitivity curve during the rising and dropping pressure.