84 research outputs found

    Hybrid sensor based on a hollow square core fiber for temperature independent refractive index detection

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    In this work, a hybrid sensor based on a section of hollow square core fiber (HSCF) spliced between two single mode fibers is proposed for the measurement of refractive index of liquids. The sensor, with a length of a few millimeters, operates in a transmission configuration. Due to the HSCF inner geometry, two different interferometers are generated. The first, a Mach-Zehnder interferometer, is insensitive to the external refractive index, and presents a sensitivity to temperature of (29.2 ± 1.1) pm/°C. The second one, a cladding modal interferometer, is highly sensitive to the external refractive index. An experimental resolution of 1.0 × 10-4 was achieved for this component. Due to the different responses of each interferometer to the parameters under study, a compensation method was developed to attain refractive index measurements that are temperature independent. The proposed sensor can find applications in areas where refractive index measurements are required and the control of room temperature is a challenge, such as in the food and beverage industry, as well as in biochemical or biomedical industries.publishe

    Negative curvature hollow core fiber sensor for the measurement of strain and temperature

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    Three different types of strain and temperature sensors based on negative curvature hollow core fiber (NCHCF) are proposed. Each sensor is produced by splicing a small section of the NCHCF between two sections of single mode fiber. Different types of interferometers are obtained simply by changing the splicing conditions. The first sensor consists on a single Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI). The remaining two configurations are attained with the same sensing structure, depending on its position in relation to the interrogation setup. Thus, a double FPI or a hybrid sensor, the latter being composed by an FPI and a Michelson interferometer, are formed. The inline sensors are of submillimeter size, thus enabling nearly punctual measurements

    Negative curvature hollow core fiber sensor for the measurement of strain and temperature

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    Three different types of strain and temperature sensors based on negative curvature hollow core fiber (NCHCF) are proposed. Each sensor is produced by splicing a small section of the NCHCF between two sections of single mode fiber. Different types of interferometers are obtained simply by changing the splicing conditions. The first sensor consists on a single Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI). The remaining two configurations are attained with the same sensing structure, depending on its position in relation to the interrogation setup. Thus, a double FPI or a hybrid sensor, the latter being composed by an FPI and a Michelson interferometer, are formed. The inline sensors are of submillimeter size, thus enabling nearly punctual measurements.publishe

    Simultaneous measurement of refractive index and temperature using a double antiresonant hollow core fiber

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    In this work, an inline sensor based on a double antiresonant hollow core fiber is proposed for the simultaneous measurement of refractive index and temperature. The fiber, consisting of four silica capillaries with wall thickness of ~1.5 um and a cladding with a thickness of ~36.5 um, is spliced between two sections of single mode fiber. The spectral behavior, measured in transmission, results from the combination of different frequencies which enable the discrimination between the two parameters. The sensing head is subjected to refractive index measurements using aqueous solutions with different concentrations of ethanol. For a sensor with a length of ~10 mm, and considering the lower frequency signal, the sensitivity to refractive index is 389.6 nm/RIU, whereas for the higher frequency, the sensitivity attained is 2.8 nm/RIU. On the other hand, the sensing head presented a sensitivity to temperature of 25.5 pm/K and -27.6 pm/K for the higher and lower frequencies, respectively.publishe

    High-power fiber laser based on a non filamented-core fully-aperiodic large pitch fiber

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    International audienceSince the double-clad fiber architectures development, fiber-based laser have witnessed an impressive power scaling [1]. The extracted power rising has been accompanied by the development of Very Large Mode Area (VLMA) fiber designs allowing overcome some key hurdles like the non-linear process or photo-darkening [2]. However, due to the very large core size of fiber architectures, a new phenomenon, referring to modal instabilities, has been evidenced recently like the current limitation which hampers any further power increase in the field of fiber laser sources without a dramatic degradation of the emitted beam quality [3]. In order to push away the appearance power threshold of this limitation, new aperiodic cladding microstructurations have been proposed to improve the higher-order modes (HOM) rejection out of the gain region and then to optimize the amplification of the sole fundamental mode [4]. These aperiodic microstructures have proved recently their potential to enhance an efficient HOM delocalization enabling singlemode confinement in the core region with passive VLMA fibers [5].In this communication we report on the first high power emission demonstration obtained using a solid non-filamented core fully-aperiodic large pitch fiber manufactured by the REPUSIL method based on the sintering and vitrification of micrometric doped silica powders. Using a simple laser cavity, an average output power of 233 W was achieved with an available pump power of 400 W for the first time in such a fiber. The preliminary M2 measurements have shown an excellent beam quality with values less than 1.4
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