4.7 Article

Temperature-Compensated Multifunctional All-Fiber Sensors for Precise Strain/High-Pressure Measurement

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 18, Pages 4634-4642

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2019.2915266

Keywords

FBG; femtosecond laser; FPI; high temperature and high-pressure; laser micromachining; temperature-insensitive

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51205049, 51875091]
  2. state 111 [B14039]
  3. Major Instrument Project of Ministry of Science and Technology of China [M1701010112YQ2500213]
  4. Study and Application of Full-model Impact Dynamic Fretting Damage Test System in the Extreme Environment [51627806]
  5. Application research of Optical Fiber Sensing in Ship Nuclear Power [6142A07030202]

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We propose two types of temperature-compensated all-fiber sensors based on a novel laser-machined Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) whose sensitivity is adjusted by controlling the FPI gauge length and fiber material. The sensors are demonstrated to achieve precise multiparameter measurements under high temperatures. One sensor is an enhanced sensitivity FPI cascaded with a femtosecond laser inscribed fiber Bragg grating. We propose a modified calculation formula considering the temperature dependence of strain/pressure sensitivities to ensure measurement accuracies. The experiment shows that the cascaded sensor exhibits excellent sensing performance with the maximum strain and pressure sensitivities of 41.6 pm/mu epsilon and -222 pm/MPa, respectively, and in a stable environment, its strain-temperature and pressure- temperature crosstalk are 0.139 mu epsilon/degrees C and 0.027 MPa/degrees C, respectively. The other sensor is the FPI itself with a length-matched gutter. It achieves an ultralow average thermal drift of similar to 0.1 pm/degrees C over 16-400 degrees C. Experimental results show that it exhibits low temperature-pressure and temperature-strain cross sensitivities of similar to-0.0017 MPa/degrees C and similar to 0.015 mu epsilon/degrees C, respectively.

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