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Publications

Publications by Paulo Caldas

2010

Characterization of the response of a dual resonance of an arc-induced long-period grating to various physical parameters

Authors
Caldas, P; Rego, G; Ivanov, OV; Santos, JL;

Publication
APPLIED OPTICS

Abstract
We present results on the characterization of the response of a dual resonance observed in the spectrum of a single long-period grating arc-induced in a B/Ge co-doped fiber to different physical parameters. The dual resonance is formed by two overlapping resonances corresponding to coupling of the core mode to symmetric and antisymmetric cladding modes. The behavior of the resonances is studied when the grating is subject to strain, bending, torsion, temperature, or external refractive-index changes. The strain, bending, and torsion sensitivities of the two resonances differ, whereas the temperature sensitivities are almost the same. The sensitivities to variation in external refractive index are the same for the two resonances when the long-period grating is straight and differ when the fiber with the grating is curved. (c) 2010 Optical Society of America

2005

Luminescence-based optical fiber chemical sensors

Authors
Jorge, PAS; Caldas, P; Da Silva, JCGE; Rosa, CC; Oliva, AG; Santos, JL; Farahi, F;

Publication
FIBER AND INTEGRATED OPTICS

Abstract
A scheme for the simultaneous determination of temperature and analyte concentration for application in luminescence-based chemical sensors is proposed. This scheme is applied to an optical oxygen sensor, which is based on the quenching of the fluorescence of a ruthenium complex. Temperature measurement is performed using the excitation radiation and an absorption long-pass filter. Preliminary results are presented that show the viability of an oxygen measurement that is independent of temperature and optical power level. The possibility of self-referenced temperature measurements with semiconductor nanoparticles is also investigated. In order to optimize the sensor design, several different optical fiber probe geometries for oxygen sensing are tested and compared, including different methods of coupling radiation into the optical fiber system. Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and polyacrylamide membranes are tested as supports for sensor immobilization in fiber-optical pH sensing devices in aqueous solution. Some results are presented that show the feasibility of using fiber-optical pH indicators for remote monitoring.

2001

Twin all-optical magnetic probe for current metering and relaying applications

Authors
Caldas, P; Jorge, PAS; Ferreira, LA; Lobo Ribeiro, AB; Santos, JL;

Publication
2001 IEEE Porto Power Tech Proceedings

Abstract
A twin polarimetric configuration based on the Faraday effect for the measurement of electric currents in high voltage environments is presented. Field test results are shown that indicate the device suitability for current metering and relaying applications. © 2001 IEEE.

2008

Fiber modal Michelson interferometers with coherence addressing and heterodyne interrogation

Authors
Caldas, P; Jorge, PAS; Araujo, FM; Ferreira, LA; Marques, MB; Rego, G; Santos, JL;

Publication
OPTICAL ENGINEERING

Abstract
A long-period-grating-based fiber optic Michelson modal interferometer with coherence addressing and heterodyne interrogation is studied as a sensing structure for measuring environmental refractive index, temperature, and liquid level. The effects of several system parameters on the measurements are investigated. Experimental results show that the sensitivity to the external refractive index increases with the order of cladding mode and with a reduction of the fiber diameter. The decrease of the fiber diameter from 125 mu m down to 70 mu m enhances the sensitivity to the external index by a factor of 2.7. It is also shown that the use of a silica-core fiber increases the sensitivity to the external index by a factor of 1.4 and reduces the thermal sensitivity by a factor of 2.5 compared to a standard fiber. (C) 2008 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.

2009

Modal interferometer based on hollow-core photonic crystal fiber for strain and temperature measurement

Authors
Aref, SH; Amezcua Correa, R; Carvalho, JP; Frazao, O; Caldas, P; Santos, JL; Araujo, FM; Latifi, H; Farahi, F; Ferreira, LA; Knight, JC;

Publication
OPTICS EXPRESS

Abstract
In this work, sensitivity to strain and temperature of a sensor relying on modal interferometry in hollow-core photonic crystal fibers is studied. The sensing structure is simply a piece of hollow-core fiber connected in both ends to standard single mode fiber. An interference pattern that is associated to the interference of light that propagates in the hollow core fundamental mode with light that propagates in other modes is observed. The phase of this interference pattern changes with the measurand interaction, which is the basis for considering this structure for sensing. The phase recovery is performed using a white light interferometric technique. Resolutions of +/- 1.4 mu epsilon and +/- 0.2 degrees C were achieved for strain and temperature, respectively. It was also found that the fiber structure is not sensitive to curvature. (C) 2009 Optical Society of America

2011

Fiber optic hot-wire flowmeter based on a metallic coated hybrid long period grating/fiber Bragg grating structure

Authors
Caldas, P; Jorge, PAS; Rego, G; Frazao, O; Santos, JL; Ferreira, LA; Araujo, F;

Publication
APPLIED OPTICS

Abstract
In this work an all-optical hot-wire flowmeter based on a silver coated fiber combining a long period grating and a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) structure is proposed. Light from a pump laser at 1480nm propagating down the fiber is coupled by the long period grating into the fiber cladding and is absorbed by the silver coating deposited on the fiber surface over the Bragg grating structure. This absorption acts like a hot wire raising the fiber temperature locally, which is effectively detected by the FBG resonance shift. The temperature increase depends on the flow speed of the surrounding air, which has the effect of cooling the fiber. It is demonstrated that the Bragg wavelength shift can be related to the flow speed. A flow speed resolution of 0.08m/s is achieved using this new configuration. (C) 2011 Optical Society of America

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