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Publications

Publications by CTM

2005

Arc-induced long-period gratings

Authors
Rego, G; Marques, PVS; Santos, JL; Salgado, HM;

Publication
FIBER AND INTEGRATED OPTICS

Abstract
The electric arc technique allows the inscription of long-period gratings (LPGs) virtually in all types of fibers, including non-photosensitive fibers, the case of non-Ge doped photonic crystal fibers being of particular interest. LPGs written in standard fibers using this technique have shown a high thermal stability. Also, the resistance to. - radiation of LPGs arc-induced in pure-silica-core fibers is being assessed and the achieved results are very promising. We have also demonstrated that the combination of arc-induced LPGs and UV-induced fiber Bragg gratings (FBGs) leads to sampled FBGs that are able to address sensing functionalities with enhanced performance. Therefore, as a result of their properties, gratings induced by arc-discharges can find a wide range of applications in optical communications as well as in fiber sensing.

2005

Simultaneous measurement of temperature and strain based on arc-induced long-period fibre gratings

Authors
Rego, G; Marques, PVS; Salgado, HM; Santos, JL;

Publication
ELECTRONICS LETTERS

Abstract
A study on arc-induced long-period fibre gratings (LPFGs) revealed that their strain sensitivity depends on the electric current of the arc discharge. Based on that property, a sensor scheme comprising two concatenated LPFGs was implemented for discrimination of temperature and strain effects. This sensor presented resolutions of +/-0.1 degreesC/rootHz and +/-35 muepsilon/rootHz, respectively.

2005

Arc-induced long-period gratings in aluminosilicate glass fibers

Authors
Rego, G; Falate, R; Santos, JL; Salgado, HM; Fabris, JL; Semjonov, SL; Dianov, EM;

Publication
OPTICS LETTERS

Abstract
Permanent long-period gratings were written using arc discharges in two aluminosilicate fibers, one of which was doped with erbium. Reversible gratings were also mechanically induced in both fibers. The thermal behavior of the arc-induced gratings was investigated at up to 1100 degrees C. It was found that the shift of the resonant wavelengths exhibited a well-defined linear dependence on temperature up to 700 degrees C. (c) 2005 Optical Society of America.

2005

Effect of ionizing radiation on the properties of arc-induced long-period fiber gratings

Authors
Rego, G; Fernandez, AF; Gusarov, A; Brichard, B; Berghmans, F; Santos, JL; Salgado, HM;

Publication
APPLIED OPTICS

Abstract
We experimentally study the effect of ionizing radiation on the properties of long-period gratings fabricated in two pure-silica-core fibers with the arc-discharge technique. It is observed that the spectra of the gratings remain almost unchanged after being subjected to doses in excess of 0.5 MGy. The results also show that the gratings' temperature and strain sensitivities are not affected by gamma radiation. (c) 2005 Optical Society of America.

2005

Intensity-referenced and temperature-independent curvature-sensing concept based on chirped fiber Bragg gratings

Authors
Romero, R; Frazao, O; Pereira, DA; Salgado, HM; Araujo, FM; Ferreira, LA;

Publication
APPLIED OPTICS

Abstract
An intensity-referenced temperature-independent curvature-measurement technique that uses a smart composite that comprises two chirped fiber Bragg gratings is demonstrated. The two gratings are embedded on opposite sides of the composite laminate and act simultaneously as curvature sensors and as wavelength discriminators, enabling a temperature-independent intensity-based scheme to measure radius of curvature. Also, the system's performance is independent of arbitrary power losses that are induced in the lead fibers to the sensing head. It is demonstrated that the measurement range depends on the relative positions of the chirped fiber Bragg gratings and on their spectral bandwidths. By using two chirped fiber Bragg gratings with bandwidths W-1 = 2.8 nm and W-2 = 3.7 nm and with central wavelengths at lambda(01) = 1560.3 nm and lambda(02) - 1563.7 nm, we obtained a resolution of 1.6 mm/(1)Hz for the measurement of the radius of curvature (similar to R = 350 mm) over the measurement range 190 mm < R < infinity. (c) 2005 Optical Society of America.

2005

Simultaneous temperature and strain measurement based on arc-induced long-period fiber gratings

Authors
Rego, G; Falate, R; Kalinowski, HJ; Fabris, JL; Marques, PVS; Salgado, HM; Santos, JL;

Publication
17th International Conference on Optical Fibre Sensors, Pts 1 and 2

Abstract
A compact sensor able to discriminate between temperature and strain related effects was implemented. The proposed sensing head comprises a single long-period grating with two sections written consecutively in the SMF-28 fiber, by the electric arc discharge technique, using different fabrication parameters. The sensor performance is based on the distinct temperature and strain sensitivity values presented by two neighbor resonances belonging to each grating section. The temperature and strain resolutions are +/- 0.1 degrees C and +/- 40 mu epsilon, respectively.

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