An in-fibre temperature sensor based on a novel dual-mode fibre is proposed and experimentally characterized. The sensor head uses an in-fibre Mach-Zehnder(MZ) structure to sense the surrounding temperature, which depends on the interference spectrums. The concentric multilayer-core fibre (CMCF), in which only two modes could be propagated, would be easier to fabricate an in-fibre MZI with clean spectrum than many fibres, such as multimode fibres, thin-core fibres, PCFs and et al. And low-loss high-strength splice between CMCF and conventional single-mode fibre can be implemented with a commercial fusion splicer. Both the propagation characteristics and operation principle of such a sensor are demonstrated in detail. A sensitivity of ~50.13 pm/°C within temperature range of 30–70 ℃ are experimentally achieved, respectively.
A novel temperature-insensitive sensor probe is proposed and experimentally characterized. The sensor probe uses an etching cladding Few Mode Fiber Bragg Grating (FM-FBG) to sense the surrounding refractive indexes (SRI), which depends on the reflection peaks. To compensate for the temperature effect in SRI sensing, various guides modes in FM-FBG that have the different sensing behaviors are used for implementation. Both the propagation characteristics and operation principle of such a sensor are demonstrated in detail. A sensitivity of ~2 nm per refractive index unit (RIU) are obtained within the SRI range of 1.333–1.373. This sensor is temperature independent due to the temperature-insensitive nature of wavelength differential Δλ between the two reflection peaks of the etching cladding FM-FBG.
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