Back to Search Start Over

Femtosecond laser fabrication of nanograting-based distributed fiber sensors for extreme environmental applications

Authors :
David Carpenter
Yuqi Li
Kehao Zhao
Jieru Zhao
Guiqiu Zheng
Mohan Wang
Thomas W. Tweedle
Yang Yang
Jingyu Wu
Qingxu Yu
Kevin P. Chen
Sheng Huang
Source :
International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing. 3:025401
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2021.

Abstract

The femtosecond laser has emerged as a powerful tool for micro- and nanoscale device fabrication. Through nonlinear ionization processes, nanometer-sized material modifications can be inscribed in transparent materials for device fabrication. This paper describes femtosecond precision inscription of nanograting in silica fiber cores to form both distributed and point fiber sensors for sensing applications in extreme environmental conditions. Through the use of scanning electron microscope imaging and laser processing optimization, high-temperature stable, Type II femtosecond laser modifications were continuously inscribed, point by point, with only an insertion loss at 1 dB m−1 or 0.001 dB per point sensor device. High-temperature performance of fiber sensors was tested at 1000 °C, which showed a temperature fluctuation of ±5.5 °C over 5 days. The low laser-induced insertion loss in optical fibers enabled the fabrication of a 1.4 m, radiation-resilient distributed fiber sensor. The in-pile testing of the distributed fiber sensor further showed that fiber sensors can execute stable and distributed temperature measurements in extreme radiation environments. Overall, this paper demonstrates that femtosecond-laser-fabricated fiber sensors are suitable measurement devices for applications in extreme environments.

Details

ISSN :
26317990 and 26318644
Volume :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
International Journal of Extreme Manufacturing
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........cbeeccb4f3ba7daa84a530003ff81e51
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/2631-7990/abe171