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Publications

Publications by Luís Carlos Coelho

2011

Optical Fibre Hydrogen Sensors Based on Palladium Coatings

Authors
Coelho, L; Silva, SFO; Tafulo, PAR; Santos, JL; Frazao, O; Malcata, FX;

Publication
INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON APPLICATIONS OF OPTICS AND PHOTONICS

Abstract
Optical fibre sensors for Hydrogen detection at low concentrations has become a growing research area using Palladium as an active medium. Palladium is widely used in hydrogen sensing as it show a high and selective affinity for hydrogen. This metal is capable to absorb hydrogen up to 900 times its own volume which permits that during the expansion mechanical forces are applied in the fibre modifying the optical response. Several optical fibre hydrogen sensor heads coated with Palladium are presented and compared using different working principles: interferometric, intensity and fiber grating-based sensors. These principles were applied in Fabry-Perot cavities, fibre Bragg gratings written in fibre SMF28 with etching in the cladding, multimode interferometers and fibre end micro-mirrors. Palladium thin film coatings over the fibre surface and with thicknesses from 10nm to 350nm were produced by using the sputtering RF technique. These studies were performed in a Hydrogen/Nitrogen atmosphere with Hydrogen concentrations from 0% to 4% (lower limit explosion). The Bragg grating inscribed in a fibre with reduced cladding diameter appears to be one of the best approaches for a fibre optic sensing head for Hydrogen detection. Future work will continue the investigation of other fibre optic structures with Hydrogen sensing capabilities and their application in specific field situations will be assessed.

2012

Hydrogen pressure sensor based on a tapered-FBG written by DUV femtosecond laser technique

Authors
Silva, S; Coelho, L; Santos, JL; Malcata, FX; Becker, M; Rothhardt, M; Bartelt, H; Frazao, O;

Publication
Optics InfoBase Conference Papers

Abstract
An optical fiber sensor based on a tapered-FBG coated with 150 nm-thick Pd film is proposed for hydrogen pressure detection. The FBG was written in a 50 µm-diameter tapered fiber by DUV femtosecond laser technology. A second FBG was inscribed in the untapered fiber region for temperature compensation. The sensing head was able to detect the variation of hydrogen pressure in the range 0-780 kPa and a maximum sensitivity of 0.15 pm/kPa was achieved. © 2012 OSA.

2010

Electrical dynamic interrogation system for long period gratings

Authors
Carvalho, JP; Coelho, L; Frazao, O; Santos, JL;

Publication
Advances in Sensors, Signals and Materials - 3rd WSEAS International Conference on Sensors and Signals, SENSIG'10, 3rd WSEAS International Conference on Materials Science, MATERIALS'10

Abstract
It is reported a new dynamic electrical interrogation technique based on the modulation of two Bragg gratings structures located in the readout unit that permits to attenuate the effect of the 1/f noise of the electronics in the resolution of the LPG-based curvature sensors. The new concept is tested to detect large variations of curvature being achieved a resolution of 6.56 × 10-3 meters.

2020

Optical fiber probes for trapping and backscattered signal analysis of sub-mm particles

Authors
Rodrigues, SM; Paiva, JS; Silva, FM; Coelho, L; Marques, PVS; Cunha, JPS; Jorge, PAS;

Publication
Optics InfoBase Conference Papers

Abstract
Optical tweezers based on metallic-coated tapered optical fibers with an aperture at the apex are fabricated and their sensing ability is tested. Preliminary results show robustness in differentiating between a trapped and no trapped state. © 2021 The Author(s).

2023

Tuning bimetallic Au@Ag nanorods Localized Surface Plasmon Resonance on side-polished optical fiber sensing configurations at near-infrared wavelengths

Authors
dos Santos, SS; Mendes, J; de Almeida, MMM; Pastoriza Santos, I; Coelho, CC;

Publication
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering

Abstract
The increasing demand for precise chemical and biological sensing has led to the development of highly efficient plasmonic optical fiber sensors. Therefore, it is essential to optimize and match the operating wavelength region of both the optical fiber configuration and localized surface plasmon resonance of nanoparticles (NPs). This can be achieved by developing NPs that can reach resonance at near-infrared wavelengths, where refractive index sensitivity is enhanced, and silica optical fibers have lower losses. High aspect-ratio bimetallic Au@Ag nanorods and different side-polished fiber structures are tested using numerical simulations. The selected optical fiber configuration was based on a side-polished fiber with a 1 mm polished section. It is compared power losses and power at the NP interface for two configurations: a step-index single-mode fiber (SMF) with core/cladding diameters of 8.2/125 µm and a multimode graded-index fiber (GIF) with 62.5/125 µm at various polishing depths. The results showed that the best performance for both configurations was achieved at similar polishing depths, namely 59.5 and 55.2 µm for the SMF and GIF, respectively. The optical impact of retardation effects due to the proximity with the fiber structure were also observed, which caused a reduction in sensitivity from 1750 nm/RIU to 1500 nm/RIU and a red-shift of around 70 nm. © 2023 SPIE.

2023

TEC4SEA-Developing maritime technology for a sustainable blue economy

Authors
Monica, P; Cruz, N; Almeida, JM; Silva, A; Silva, E; Pinho, C; Almeida, C; Viegas, D; Pessoa, LM; Lima, AP; Martins, A; Zabel, F; Ferreira, BM; Dias, I; Campos, R; Araujo, J; Coelho, LC; Jorge, PS; Mendes, J;

Publication
OCEANS 2023 - LIMERICK

Abstract
One way to mitigate the high costs of doing science or business at sea is to create technological infrastructures possessing all the skills and resources needed for successful maritime operations, and make those capabilities and skills available to the external entities requiring them. By doing so, the individual economic and scientific agents can be spared the enormous effort of creating and maintaining their own, particular set of equivalent capabilities, thus drastically lowering their initial operating costs. In addition to cost savings, operating based on fully-fledged, shared infrastructures not only allows the use of more advanced scientific equipment and highly skilled personnel, but it also enables the business teams (be it industry or research) to focus on their goals, rather than on equipment, logistics, and support. This paper will describe the TEC4SEA infrastructure, created precisely to operate as described. This infrastructure has been under implementation in the last few years, and has now entered its operational phase. This paper will describe it, present its current portfolio of services, and discuss the most relevant assets and facilities that have been recently acquired, so that the research and industrial communities requiring the use of such assets can fully evaluate their adequacy for their own purposes and projects.

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