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Experimental Difficulties With LPG Sensors Operating Close to the Phase Turning Points

IR@CGCRI: CSIR-Central Glass and Ceramic Research Institute, Kolkata

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Title Experimental Difficulties With LPG Sensors Operating Close to the Phase Turning Points
 
Creator Carter, Richard M
Maier, Robert R J
Biswas, Palas
Basumallick, Nandini
Bandyopadhyay, Somnath
Jones, Benjamin J S
McCulloch, Scott
Barton, James S
 
Subject Processing Science
 
Description In this paper we report on experiments aimed at the development of a highly responsive sensor based on long period gratings (LPGs) operating at high order cladding modes which exhibit a turn-around-point in their phase matching diagrams. These high order cladding modes are accessed by decreasing the period of the grating within standard optical fiber according to theoretical simulations. The sensors tested detect hydrogen through a Pd coating on the fiber cladding. As expected from simulations these sensors exhibit a near eight fold increase in response to 1% hydrogen when operated near the phase turning point. This increase in response is, however, not selective to hydrogen and a combination of increased thermal noise and broadened resonance condition serves to decrease the signal to noise ratio such that any gain in theoretical sensitivity is counter-acted by a loss in fidelity of the recovered (or recorded) signal. The highest sensitivity (shift of a LPG lossband) recorded was in the order of 470 pm for an exposure to 1% H-2 at 70 degrees C, which represented a shift of similar to 1/150 of the FWHM of the LPG loss band.
 
Publisher IEEE-Institute of Electrical Electronics Engineers
 
Date 2016-09
 
Type Article
PeerReviewed
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://cgcri.csircentral.net/3738/1/somnath.pdf
Carter, Richard M and Maier, Robert R J and Biswas, Palas and Basumallick, Nandini and Bandyopadhyay, Somnath and Jones, Benjamin J S and McCulloch, Scott and Barton, James S (2016) Experimental Difficulties With LPG Sensors Operating Close to the Phase Turning Points. Journal of Lightwave Technology, 34 (17). pp. 3999-4004. ISSN 0733-8724
 
Relation http://cgcri.csircentral.net/3738/