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Publications

Publications by José Luís Santos

2010

Fibre-optic SPR sensor with a FBG interrogation scheme for readout enhancement

Authors
Diaz Herrera, N; Viegas, D; Jorge, PAS; Araujo, FM; Santos, JL; Navarrete, MC; Gonzalez Cano, A;

Publication
SENSORS AND ACTUATORS B-CHEMICAL

Abstract
In this Work a new configuration of a refractometric sensor for aqueous solutions based on the combination of surface plasmon resonance (SPR) with fibre Bragg gratings (FBG) is presented. Two FBGs are selected having reflection maxima in each side of the plasmon resonance peak. These FBGs enable a different processing scheme for the information provided by the SPR transducer. This improved interrogation method increases the sensitivity and resolution of the sensor compared with those obtained with the usual method of tracking the spectral transmittance minimum and makes the system performance independent of optical Source power fluctuations. The experimental results obtained with a double-layer uniform-waist tapered fibre show the feasibility of this approach and its applicability in SPR-based biosensors that Must face very exigent measuring conditions.

2005

Luminescence-based optical fiber chemical sensors

Authors
Jorge, PAS; Caldas, P; Da Silva, JCGE; Rosa, CC; Oliva, AG; Santos, JL; Farahi, F;

Publication
FIBER AND INTEGRATED OPTICS

Abstract
A scheme for the simultaneous determination of temperature and analyte concentration for application in luminescence-based chemical sensors is proposed. This scheme is applied to an optical oxygen sensor, which is based on the quenching of the fluorescence of a ruthenium complex. Temperature measurement is performed using the excitation radiation and an absorption long-pass filter. Preliminary results are presented that show the viability of an oxygen measurement that is independent of temperature and optical power level. The possibility of self-referenced temperature measurements with semiconductor nanoparticles is also investigated. In order to optimize the sensor design, several different optical fiber probe geometries for oxygen sensing are tested and compared, including different methods of coupling radiation into the optical fiber system. Polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and polyacrylamide membranes are tested as supports for sensor immobilization in fiber-optical pH sensing devices in aqueous solution. Some results are presented that show the feasibility of using fiber-optical pH indicators for remote monitoring.

2001

Twin all-optical magnetic probe for current metering and relaying applications

Authors
Caldas, P; Jorge, PAS; Ferreira, LA; Lobo Ribeiro, AB; Santos, JL;

Publication
2001 IEEE Porto Power Tech Proceedings

Abstract
A twin polarimetric configuration based on the Faraday effect for the measurement of electric currents in high voltage environments is presented. Field test results are shown that indicate the device suitability for current metering and relaying applications. © 2001 IEEE.

2008

Fiber modal Michelson interferometers with coherence addressing and heterodyne interrogation

Authors
Caldas, P; Jorge, PAS; Araujo, FM; Ferreira, LA; Marques, MB; Rego, G; Santos, JL;

Publication
OPTICAL ENGINEERING

Abstract
A long-period-grating-based fiber optic Michelson modal interferometer with coherence addressing and heterodyne interrogation is studied as a sensing structure for measuring environmental refractive index, temperature, and liquid level. The effects of several system parameters on the measurements are investigated. Experimental results show that the sensitivity to the external refractive index increases with the order of cladding mode and with a reduction of the fiber diameter. The decrease of the fiber diameter from 125 mu m down to 70 mu m enhances the sensitivity to the external index by a factor of 2.7. It is also shown that the use of a silica-core fiber increases the sensitivity to the external index by a factor of 1.4 and reduces the thermal sensitivity by a factor of 2.5 compared to a standard fiber. (C) 2008 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers.

2012

Fabry-Perot cavities based on chemical etching for high temperature and strain measurement

Authors
Tafulo, PAR; Jorge, PAS; Santos, JL; Frazao, O;

Publication
OPTICS COMMUNICATIONS

Abstract
In this paper, two hybrid multimode/single mode fiber Fabry-Perot (FP) cavities were compared. The cavities fabricated by chemical etching are presented as high temperature and strain sensors. In order to produce this FP cavity a single mode fiber was spliced to a graded index multimode fiber with 62.5 mu m core diameter. The Fabry-Perot cavities were tested as a high temperature sensor in the range between room temperature and 700 C and as strain sensors. A reversible shift of the interferometric peaks with temperature allowed to estimate a sensitivity of 0.75 +/- 0.03 pm/degrees C and 0.98 +/- 0.04 pm/degrees C for the sensor A and B respectively. For strain measurement sensor A demonstrated a sensitivity of 1.85 +/- 0.07 pm/mu and sensor B showed a sensitivity of 3.14 +/- 0.05 pm/mu. The sensors demonstrated the feasibility of low cost fiber optic sensors for high temperature and strain.

2007

Optical fiber sensing using quantum dots

Authors
Jorge, PAS; Martins, MA; Trindade, T; Santos, JL; Farahi, F;

Publication
SENSORS

Abstract
Recent advances in the application of semiconductor nanocrystals, or quantum dots, as biochemical sensors are reviewed. Quantum dots have unique optical properties that make them promising alternatives to traditional dyes in many luminescence based bioanalytical techniques. An overview of the more relevant progresses in the application of quantum dots as biochemical probes is addressed. Special focus will be given to configurations where the sensing dots are incorporated in solid membranes and immobilized in optical fibers or planar waveguide platforms.

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