| Literature DB >> 35957311 |
Soyeon Ahn1, Gi Hyen Lee1, Jun-Yong Lee1, Youngseo Kim1, Min Su Kim1, Srinivas Pagidi2, Byeong Kwon Choi1, Ji Su Kim1, Jong-Hyun Kim1,2, Min Yong Jeon1,2.
Abstract
Cholesteric liquid crystals (CLCs) can be applied to various physical and chemical sensors because their alignment structures are changed by external stimuli. Here, we propose a CLC device fabricated by vertically forming the helical axis of the CLC between the cross-sections of two optical fiber ferrules. An optical fiber temperature sensor was successfully implemented using the proposed optical fiber ferrule-based CLC device. A wideband wavelength-swept laser with a center wavelength of 1073 nm and scanning range of 220 nm was used as a light source to measure the variations in the reflection spectrum band according to the temperature change in the CLC cell. The wavelength variation of the reflection spectrum band according to the temperature applied to the CLC cell was reversible and changed linearly with a change in the temperature, and the long-wavelength edge variation rate according to the temperature change was -5.0 nm/°C. Additionally, as the temperature applied to the CLC cell increased, the reflection spectrum bandwidth gradually decreased; the reflection spectrum bandwidth varied at a rate of -1.89 nm/°C. The variations in the refractive indices with temperature were calculated from the band wavelengths of the reflection spectrum. The pitch at each temperature was calculated based on the refractive indices and it gradually decreased as the temperature increased.Entities:
Keywords: bandpass filter; cholesteric liquid crystal; fiber laser; fiber-optic sensors; temperature sensors; wavelength-swept laser
Year: 2022 PMID: 35957311 PMCID: PMC9370840 DOI: 10.3390/s22155752
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.847
Comparison of recent research results.
| Authors | Year | Method | Sensitivity | Detection Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chunxia et al. [ | 2018 | tapered multi-core fiber | 36.8 pm/°C | 20~1000 °C |
| Wang et al. [ | 2018 | Mach–Zehnder interferometer | 8.962 nm/°C | 33~43 °C |
| Noor et al. [ | 2019 | multi-mode interference | 21 pm/°C | - |
| Han et al. [ | 2019 | CLC film based on a side polished fiber | 1.7 nm/°C | |
| Hu et al. [ | 2020 | dye-doped CLC-based on a fiber micro tip | −9.167 nm/°C | 23~29 °C |
| Liu et al. [ | 2021 | FBG and fiber-tip bubble | 11.1 pm/°C | 20~100 °C |
| Our work | 2022 | Optical fiber ferrule-based CLC cell | −5.0 nm/°C | 20~40 °C |
Figure 1Transmission optical spectrum of CLC with a chiral dopant concentration of 12.93 wt.%.
Figure 2Fabrication process of the CLC cell.
Figure 3Schematic diagram of the fabricated CLC cell.
Figure 4Experimental setup of the temperature sensor using wideband WSL.
Figure 5Optical spectra of the WSL.
Figure 6(a) Change in reflection spectra when the temperature of the CLC cell is increased from 20 to 40 °C, (b) change in reflection spectra when the temperature of the CLC cell is decreased from 40 to 20 °C, (c) reflection spectra for several temperatures, and (d) a graph of the variation in wavelength when the CLC cell was heated and cooled.
Figure 7Graphs of the reflection spectrum bandwidth of the CLC cell with changes in temperature.
Figure 8(a) Graph of nonlinear fitting using the experimental data of the ratio of and and (b) the refractive indices of , , and according to the temperature obtained by applying the four constant values.
Constant values of A, B, , and β.
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| 1.5072 | 6.4173 × 10−8 | 0.3747 | 0.3159 |
Figure 9Variation of the pitch of the CLC cell according to the temperature calculated from the refractive indices in Figure 8.