A high-temperature fiber sensor based on two paralleled fiber-optic Fabry–Perot interferometers (FPIs) with ultrahigh sensitivity is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. Unlike the structures of the traditional Vernier effect composed of the cascaded components, the proposed fiber sensor is made up of two paralleled FPIs for high-temperature sensing with advantages of simple fabrication, high sensitivity, and low noise. One FPI for sensing is obtained by fusing a short section of polarization-maintaining photonic crystal fiber into the lead-in single-mode fiber (SMF). The other for reference is obtained by fusing a short section of hollow core silica tube between two SMFs. The two FPIs have similar free spectral range, with the spectral envelope of the paralleled sensor shifting much more than the single-sensing FPI. Experimental results indicate that the proposed sensor possesses considerable temperature sensitivities of −45 and −92 pm / ° C, respectively, in the measurements of 100°C to 300°C and 300°C to 800°C. |
ACCESS THE FULL ARTICLE
No SPIE Account? Create one
CITATIONS
Cited by 12 scholarly publications.
Fiber optics sensors
Interferometers
Fiber optics
Sensors
Single mode fibers
Optical engineering
Temperature metrology