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Publications

Publications by Manuel Joaquim Marques

2014

Advanced experiments with an Erbium doped fiber laser

Authors
Marques, PVS; Marques, MB; Rosa, CC;

Publication
12TH EDUCATION AND TRAINING IN OPTICS AND PHOTONICS CONFERENCE

Abstract
This communication describes an optical hands-on fiber laser experiment aimed at advanced college courses. Optical amplifiers and laser sources represent very important optical devices in numerous applications ranging from telecommunications to medicine. The study of advanced photonics experiments is particularly relevant at undergraduate and master level. This paper discusses the implementation of an optical fiber laser made with a cavity built with two tunable Bragg gratings. This scheme allows the students to understand the laser working principles as a function of the laser cavity set-up. One or both of the gratings can be finely tuned in wavelength through applied stress; therefore, the degree of spectral mismatch of the two gratings can be adjusted, effectively changing the cavity feedback. The impact of the cavity conditions on the laser threshold, spectrum and efficiency is analyzed. This experiment assumes that in a previous practice, the students should had already characterized the erbium doped fiber in terms of absorption and fluorescent spectra, and the spectral gain as a function of pump power.

2016

CAVITY RING-DOWN TECHNIQUE FOR REMOTE SENSING

Authors
Silva, S; Marques, MB; Frazao, O;

Publication
MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS

Abstract
This work demonstrates the viability of using a cavity ring-down (CRD) technique for remote sensing. A conventional CRD configuration is used where an optical circulator is added inside the fiber loop to couple 19 km of optical fiber with a gold mirror at its end with the purpose of remote sensing. As a proof-of-concept, an intensity sensor based on an eight-figure configuration is used at the end of the 19 km of fiber for displacement sensing. (C) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

2013

Parallel Fabry-Perot interferometer in suspended twin-core fiber

Authors
Andre, RM; Kobelke, J; Schuster, K; Bartelt, H; Marques, MB; Frazao, O;

Publication
FIFTH EUROPEAN WORKSHOP ON OPTICAL FIBRE SENSORS

Abstract
Small sections of suspended twin-core fiber are used in reflection configurations to create two parallel Fabry-Perot cavities. Situations where both cores are excited and where only one core is excited are analyzed and compared. When both cores are excited, two parallel and equivalent cavities are formed and an interference pattern with higher visibility is obtained. The structure is also characterized with respect to temperature and a sensitivity of 12.4 pm/K is achieved.

2015

Eight year experience in open ended instrumentation laboratory

Authors
Marques, MB; Rosa, CC; Marques, PVS;

Publication
EDUCATION AND TRAINING IN OPTICS AND PHOTONICS: ETOP 2015

Abstract
When designing laboratory courses in a Physics Major we consider a range of objectives: teaching Physics; developing lab competencies; instrument control and data acquisition; learning about measurement errors and error propagation; an introduction to project management; team work skills and scientific writing. But nowadays we face pressure to decrease laboratory hours due to the cost involved. Many universities are replacing lab classes for simulation activities, hiring PhD. and master students to give first year lab classes, and reducing lab hours. This leads to formatted lab scripts and poor autonomy of the students, and failure to enhance creativity and autonomy. In this paper we present our eight year experience with a laboratory course that is mandatory in the third year of Physics and Physical Engineering degrees. Since the students had previously two standard laboratory courses, we focused on teaching instrumentation and giving students autonomy. The course is divided in two parts: one third is dedicated to learn computer controlled instrumentation and data acquisition (based in LabView); the final 2/3 is dedicated to a group project. In this project, the team (2 or 3 students) must develop a project and present it in a typical conference format at the end of the semester. The project assignments are usually not very detailed (about two or three lines long), giving only general guidelines pointing to a successful project (students often recycle objectives putting forward a very personal project); all of them require assembling some hardware. Due to our background, about one third of the projects are related to Optics.

2016

Temperature-Independent Multi-Parameter Measurement Based on a Tapered Bragg Fiber

Authors
Martins, TJM; Marques, MB; Roy, P; Jamier, R; Fevrier, S; Frazao, O;

Publication
IEEE PHOTONICS TECHNOLOGY LETTERS

Abstract
Temperature-independent strain and angle measurements are achieved resorting to a taper fabricated on a Bragg fiber using a CO2 laser. The characteristic bimodal interference of an untapered Bragg fiber is rendered multimode after taper fabrication and the resulting transmission spectra are analyzed as a function of strain, applied angle, and temperature variations. The intrinsic strain sensitivity exhibited by the Bragg fiber is increased 15 fold after tapering and reaches 22.68 pm/mu epsilon. The angle and temperature measurements are also performed with maximum sensitivities of 185.10 pm/deg and -12.20 pm/K, respectively. The difference in wavelength shift promoted by variations in strain, angle, and temperature for the two fringes studied is examined. Strain and angle sensing with little temperature sensitivity is achieved, presenting a response of 2.87 pm/mu epsilon and -57.31 pm/deg, respectively, for strain values up to 400 mu epsilon and angles up to 10 degrees. Simultaneous angle and strain measurements are demonstrated.

2016

Strain and curvature-independent temperature sensor based on an interferometer taper fabricated with a CO2 laser

Authors
Martins, TJM; Marques, MB; Frazao, O;

Publication
MICROWAVE AND OPTICAL TECHNOLOGY LETTERS

Abstract
An optical fiber interferometer taper fabricated with a CO2 laser is proposed for strain and curvature-independent temperature measurement. Variations in temperature produce changes in the conditions of the interference between light traveling along the core and cladding and a linear behavior is verified for the relation between the wavelength of the resonant loss peak and temperature, yielding a sensitivity of 110 pm/degrees C for a range between 25 and 510 degrees C. Both the applied strain and curvature only promote significant changes in the transmitted power, leaving the wavelength of the resonant loss peak approximately constant and rendering this optical sensing device a good strain and curvature-independent temperature sensor. (c) 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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