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24,144 result(s) for "optical sensor"
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Comprehensive Analysis of FBG and Distributed Rayleigh, Brillouin, and Raman Optical Sensor-Based Solutions for Road Infrastructure Monitoring Applications
This study focuses on a comprehensive analysis of the common methods for road infrastructure monitoring, as well as the perspective of various fiber-optic sensor (FOS) realization solutions in road monitoring applications. Fiber-optic sensors are a topical technology that ensures multiple advantages such as passive nature, immunity to electromagnetic interference, multiplexing capabilities, high sensitivity, and spatial resolution, as well as remote operation and multiple physical parameter monitoring, hence offering embedment potential within the road pavement structure for needed smart road solutions. The main key factors that affect FOS-based road monitoring scenarios and configurations are analyzed within this review. One such factor is technology used for optical sensing—fiber Bragg grating (FBG), Brillouin, Rayleigh, or Raman-based sensing. A descriptive comparison is made comparing typical sensitivity, spatial resolution, measurement distance, and applications. Technological approaches for monitoring physical parameters, such as strain, temperature, vibration, humidity, and pressure, as a means of assessing road infrastructure integrity and smart application integration, are also evaluated. Another critical aspect concerns spatial positioning, focusing on the point, quasi-distributed, and distributed methodologies. Lastly, the main topical FOS-based application areas are discussed, analyzed, and evaluated.
Optical Biosensors Based on Silicon-On-Insulator Ring Resonators: A Review
Recent developments in optical biosensors based on integrated photonic devices are reviewed with a special emphasis on silicon-on-insulator ring resonators. The review is mainly devoted to the following aspects: (1) Principles of sensing mechanism, (2) sensor design, (3) biofunctionalization procedures for specific molecule detection and (4) system integration and measurement set-ups. The inherent challenges of implementing photonics-based biosensors to meet specific requirements of applications in medicine, food analysis, and environmental monitoring are discussed.
SiNx/SiO2-Based Fabry–Perot Interferometer on Sapphire for Near-UV Optical Gas Sensing of Formaldehyde in Air
Fabry–Perot interferometers (FPIs), comprising foundry-compatible dielectric thin films on sapphire wafer substrates, were investigated for possible use in chemical sensing. Specifically, structures comprising two vertically stacked distributed Bragg reflectors (DBRs), with the lower DBR between a sapphire substrate and a silicon-oxide (SiO2) resonator layer and the other DBR on top of this resonator layer, were investigated for operation in the near-ultraviolet (near-UV) range. The DBRs are composed of a stack of nitride-rich silicon-nitride (SiNx) layers for the higher index and SiO2 layers for the lower index. An exemplary application would be formaldehyde detection at sub-ppm concentrations in air, using UV absorption spectroscopy in the 300–360 nm band, while providing spectral selectivity against the main interfering gases, notably NO2 and O3. Although SiNx thin films are conventionally used only for visible and near-infrared optical wavelengths (above 450 nm) because of high absorbance at lower wavelengths, this work shows that nitride-rich SiNx is suitable for near-UV wavelengths. The interplay between spectral absorbance, transmittance and reflectance in a FPI is presented in a comparative study between one FPI design using stoichiometric material (Si3N4) and two designs based on N-rich compositions, SiN1.39 and SiN1.49. Spectral measurements confirm that if the design accounts for phase penetration depth, sufficient performance can be achieved with the SiN1.49-based FPI design for gas absorption spectroscopy in near-UV, with peak transmission at 330 nm of 64%, a free spectral range (FSR) of 20 nm and a full-width half-magnitude spectral resolution (FWHM) of 2 nm.
Polymer Waveguide Sensor Based on Evanescent Bragg Grating for Lab-on-a-Chip Applications
In this work, an evanescent Bragg grating sensor inscribed in a few-mode planar polymer waveguide was integrated into microchannel structures and characterized by various chemical applications. The planar waveguide and the microchannels consisted of epoxide-based polymers. The Bragg grating structure was postprocessed by using point-by-point direct inscription technology. By monitoring the central wavelength shift of the reflected Bragg signal, the sensor showed a temperature sensitivity of −47.75 pm/K. Moreover, the functionality of the evanescent field-based measurements is demonstrated with two application examples: the refractive index sensing of different aqueous solutions and gas-phase hydrogen concentration detection. For the latter application, the sensor was additionally coated with a functional layer based on palladium nanoparticles. During the refractive index sensing measurement, the sensor achieved a sensitivity of 6.5 nm/RIU from air to 99.9% pure isopropyl alcohol. For the gas-phase hydrogen detection, the coated sensor achieved a reproducible concentration detection up to 4 vol% hydrogen. According to the reported experimental results, the integrated Bragg-grating-based waveguide sensor demonstrates high potential for applications based on the lab-on-a-chip concept.
Cantilever-Based Sensor Utilizing a Diffractive Optical Element with High Sensitivity to Relative Humidity
High-sensitivity and simple, low-cost readout are desirable features for sensors independent of the application area. Micro-cantilever sensors use the deflection induced by the analyte presence to achieve high-sensitivity but possess complex electronic readouts. Current holographic sensors probe the analyte presence by measuring changes in their optical properties, have a simpler low-cost readout, but their sensitivity can be further improved. Here, the two working principles were combined to obtain a new hybrid sensor with enhanced sensitivity. The diffractive element, a holographically patterned thin photopolymer layer, was placed on a polymer (polydimethylsiloxane) layer forming a bi-layer macro-cantilever. The different responses of the layers to analyte presence lead to cantilever deflection. The sensitivity and detection limits were evaluated by measuring the variation in cantilever deflection and diffraction efficiency with relative humidity. It was observed that the sensitivity is tunable by controlling the spatial frequency of the photopolymer gratings and the cantilever thickness. The sensor deflection was also visible to the naked eye, making it a simple, user-friendly device. The hybrid sensor diffraction efficiency response to the target analyte had an increased sensitivity (10-fold when compared with the cantilever or holographic modes operating independently), requiring a minimum upturn in the readout complexity.
Exhaustive analysis and simple model of an angular displacement optical fiber sensor
Accurate tilt-angle measurement is vital in applications ranging from aerospace to civil infrastructure monitoring, especially under harsh conditions where conventional inclinometers may fail. Here, we present a comprehensive analytical model for multi-axis tilt sensing based on intensity-modulated optical fiber sensors (OFDSs). By capturing how a Gaussian beam, reflected from a tilted target, couples into arrays of receiving fibers, our model bridges geometric fiber parameters, numerical aperture, and target distance to predict the measured power for various tilt angles and axes. We validate its performance experimentally using multiple fiber-bundle configurations: bifurcated, trifurcated, differential, symmetrical, and quasi–random 19-fiber arrangements, demonstrating accurate operation up to tilt over distances of up to 15 mm. In each case, the theoretical predictions match well with measured data, showing that differential or concentric fiber layouts suppress noise and eliminate ambiguities in tilt-direction detection. A parametric sweep shows that NA drift contributes signal change, while core- and spacing-tolerances each add , confirming that the sensor retains its specified accuracy when fabricated with standard-spec fibers. Compared to existing fiber-optic and mechanical inclinometers, our approach is simpler to fabricate, can be tailored to specific operational ranges, and remains reasonably resilient under the tested variations. Moreover, we show how multi-fiber geometries enable axis-wise tilt discrimination and improved sensitivity through differential measurements. These findings highlight the potential for cost-effective, real-time, multi-axis tilt sensors that can address Industry 5.0 and advanced physics lab instrumentation needs. Future work will extend the sensor to larger angular spans and complex reflective surfaces, aiming to further broaden its applicability and reach.
Review and Analysis of Peak Tracking Techniques for Fiber Bragg Grating Sensors
Fiber Bragg Grating (FBG) sensors are among the most popular elements for fiber optic sensor networks used for the direct measurement of temperature and strain. Modern FBG interrogation setups measure the FBG spectrum in real-time, and determine the shift of the Bragg wavelength of the FBG in order to estimate the physical parameters. The problem of determining the peak wavelength of the FBG from a spectral measurement limited in resolution and noise, is referred as the peak-tracking problem. In this work, the several peak-tracking approaches are reviewed and classified, outlining their algorithmic implementations: the methods based on direct estimation, interpolation, correlation, resampling, transforms, and optimization are discussed in all their proposed implementations. Then, a simulation based on coupled-mode theory compares the performance of the main peak-tracking methods, in terms of accuracy and signal to noise ratio resilience.
Synthetic Spectrum Approach for Brillouin Optical Time-Domain Reflectometry
We propose a novel method to improve the spatial resolution of Brillouin optical time-domain reflectometry (BOTDR), referred to as synthetic BOTDR (S-BOTDR), and experimentally verify the resolution improvements. Due to the uncertainty relation between position and frequency, the spatial resolution of a conventional BOTDR system has been limited to about one meter. In S-BOTDR, a synthetic spectrum is obtained by combining four Brillouin spectrums measured with different composite pump lights and different composite low-pass filters. We mathematically show that the resolution limit, in principle, for conventional BOTDR can be surpassed by S-BOTDR and experimentally prove that S-BOTDR attained a 10-cm spatial resolution. To the best of our knowledge, this has never been achieved or reported.
Report on TESCA irradiation of optical sensors and tests of glasses
The TESCA irradiation campaign, conducted from November 16 to December 17, 2023 (one reactor operating cycle) in the SCK•CEN BR2 research reactor, enabled testing of optical sensors at different development stages, under intense radiation: fast neutron fluence (E > 1 MeV) of 1 to 2 x 10 19 neutrons/cm 2 and gamma dose of about 5 GGy. The temperature ranged between 100°C and 500°C. TESCA irradiation enabled on-line testing of Fabry-Perot extensometers, and miniature, non-contact, high-temperature optical pyrometry sensors. We also report an online measurement of radiation-induced attenuation on a sapphire sample. Because all sensors and measurements are temperature-sensitive, it was crucial to either maintain stable temperatures or accurately monitor them to assess the impact of radiation on sensor response stability at constant load or on glass parameters. Brief temperature jumps were also applied to test sensors accuracy. An overview of results from monitoring the various sensors and experiments throughout the irradiation cycle are provided. A well thermally stabilized Fabry–Perot extensometer maintained high stability, with a drift below 1 µm under constant load. It also ensured accurate thermal expansion measurements during temperature jumps. The pyrometric sensors operated effectively under intense irradiation at steady temperature: the collected blackbody emission spectrum was preserved, as expected with constant temperature. The unusable spectral range around the OH peak will be extended to [1250–1430 nm]. In contrast, the RIA setup showed susceptibility to temperature variations and mechanical vibrations, indicating the need for improved mechanical robustness.
Sensing Using Light: A Key Area of Sensors
This invited featured paper offers a Doctrinal Conception of sensing using Light (SuL) as an “umbrella” in which any sensing approach using Light Sciences and Technologies can be easily included. The key requirements of a sensing system will be quickly introduced by using a bottom-up methodology. Thanks to this, it will be possible to get a general conception of a sensor using Light techniques and know some related issues, such as its main constituted parts and types. The case in which smartness is conferred to the device is also considered. A quick “flight” over 10 significant cases using different principles, techniques, and technologies to detect diverse measurands in various sector applications is offered to illustrate this general concept. After reading this paper, any sensing approach using Light Sciences and Technologies may be easily included under the umbrella: sensing using Light or photonic sensors (PS).