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Publications

Publications by PHT

2019

Femtosecond Laser Micromachining of Fabry-Perot Interferometers in Fused Silica for Refractive Index Sensing

Authors
Maia, JM; Amorim, VA; Viveiros, D; Marques, PVS;

Publication
FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON APPLICATIONS OF OPTICS AND PHOTONICS

Abstract
A Fabry-Perot interferometer was fabricated inside a fused silica substrate through femtosecond laser micromachining. The influence of the waveguide's writing parameters on the measured signal's quality was studied for an interferometer with a 27-mu m wide cavity. Optimal signal-to-noise ratio and fringe visibility were obtained for waveguides written at 75 nJ and 50 mu m/s. The same device was characterized with different refractive index liquids, and a maximum sensitivity of 1181.4 +/- 23.6 nm/RIU was obtained in the index range of 1.2962 to 1.3828 (at 1550 nm) for the spectral order m = 46.

2019

Fiber Microsphere Coupled in a Taper for a Large Curvature Range

Authors
Robalinho, P; Frazao, O;

Publication
FIBERS

Abstract
This work consists of using an optical fiber microsphere as a sensor for a wide range of curvature radii. The microsphere was manufactured in a standard fiber with an electric arc. In order to maximize system efficiency, the microsphere was spliced in the center of a taper. This work revealed that the variations of the wavelength where the maxima and minima of the spectrum are located varies linearly with the curvature of the system with a maximum sensitive of 580 +/- 20 (pm km). This is because the direction of the input beam in the microsphere depends on the system curvature, giving rise to interferometric variations within the microsphere.

2019

Graphene oxide as a tunable platform for microsphere-based optical fiber sensors

Authors
Monteiro, CS; Raposo, M; Ribeiro, P; Silva, S; Frazao, O;

Publication
FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON APPLICATIONS OF OPTICS AND PHOTONICS

Abstract
Hollow microsphere fiber sensors are Fabry-Perot interferometers ( FPI) that can be used for lateral loading, temperature, and refractive index sensing. In this work, graphene oxide (GO) is explored as a tunable platform for enhancing the spectral properties of hollow microsphere fiber sensors. GO offers similar mechanical and optical properties as graphene, with the advantage of a wider range of deposition methods and a lower cost. The influence of multilayer coatings of polyethylenimine (PEI) and GO, achieved with the layer-by-layer technique, on the reflectivity of the outer surface, and hence, on the spectrum of the FPI for maximum of 30 bilayers was studied. The obtained results revealed a change of the microsphere outer surface reflectivity and also of visibility of the reflected spectrum when varying the number of bilayers. A maximum signal amplitude of 3.9 dB was attained for the 13th bilayer, allowing to conclude that PEI/GO multilayer coatings can be used for enhancing desired properties of the three-wave FPI for different sensing applications.

2019

Mass Producible Low-Loss Broadband Optical Waveguides in Eagle2000 by Femtosecond Laser Writing

Authors
Amorim, VA; Viveiros, D; Maia, JM; Marques, PVS;

Publication
IEEE PHOTONICS TECHNOLOGY LETTERS

Abstract
Optical waveguides were fabricated in alkaline earth boro-aluminosilicate glass, by femtosecond laser direct writing, with varying pulse energy and scan velocity. A spectral characterization, from 500 nm to 1700 nm, was made in order to determine their losses and understand its dependence on the processing parameters. Three major loss mechanisms were identified. At longer wavelengths, loss is mainly due to weak coupling. On the other hand, the behavior at shorter wavelengths is governed by propagation loss due to Rayleigh scattering, which was shown to be practically eliminated (& x003C; 0.05 dB $\cdot$ cm $<^>{-1} {\cdot }\,\,\mu \text{m}<^>{4}$ ) at higher scan velocities. Bulk absorption was also found to have an influence in the propagation losses at higher wavelengths. The combination of intermediate pulse energies (between 125-250 nJ) and high scan velocities (above 6 cm/s) allowed the fabrication of optical waveguides offering low losses across the entire range of wavelengths tested, facilitating applications that require larger wavelength working bands. Furthermore, since optimal fabrication conditions are achieved at higher scanning velocities, mass production with reduced fabrication times can be achieved.

2019

Micro-Cantilever Displacement Detection Based in Optical Fiber Tip

Authors
Robalinho, P; Frazao, O;

Publication
SENSORS

Abstract
This work demonstrates the potential of combining a microsphere with a tip for the functionality of the contact sensor. This sensor consists of a tip aligned with the fiber core and a microsphere, which appears during tip formation. This new structure was produced using the electric arc machine. The sensor operation consists of the variation of the tip curvature, which causes a variation of the optical paths and, consequently, a change in the output signal. The study of this micro-cantilever consisted of an exploration of the contact mode. In addition, the sensor was characterized by temperature, which shows very low sensitivity and vibration. This last characterization was performed with two configurations parallel and perpendicular to the oscillating surface. The perpendicular case showed higher sensitivity and has an operating band of 0 Hz to 20 kHz. In this configuration, for frequencies up to 2 Hz, the intensity varies linearly with the frequencies and with a sensitivity of 0.032 +/- 0.001 (Hz(-1)). For the parallel case, the operating band was from 1.5 kHz to 7 kHz.

2019

Plasma control by pattern recognition in laser induced breakdown spectroscopy

Authors
Ferreira, MFS; Guimaraes, D; Jorge, PAS; Martins, RC;

Publication
FOURTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON APPLICATIONS OF OPTICS AND PHOTONICS

Abstract
A low-computational intensive laser control approach is proposed for implementing an embedded control system, using pattern recognition by relevant principal component analysis for laser induced breakdown spectroscopy applications. The laser energy is directly related to the resulting spectral pattern and is determined by iterations in the feature space. Results show that single shot iterations until optimum energy can be significantly reduced by pattern recognition. A performance benchmark with minerals, alloys and pellets from material collected from a drill demonstrated an average of 50% improvement, significantly reducing sample deterioration and improving measurement safety.

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