RESUMEN
High temperature monitoring is critical to the health and performance of vital pieces of infrastructure such as jet engine, fuel cells, coal gasifiers, and nuclear reactor core. However, it remains a big challenge to realize reliable distributed high temperature sensing system with high speed, high spatial and temperature resolution simultaneously. In this work, a Raman distributed high temperature sensing system with high temperature resolution and high spatial resolution was realized in a single-crystal YAG fiber. The sensing system demonstrated operation from room temperature up to 1400°C with a spatial resolution of 7 cm and response time of 1 millisecond in a 1m long YAG fiber. The average temperature sensitivity of the system is about 7.95 × 10-4/°C. To the best of our knowledge, this is the best spatial resolution and response time reported in literature. In this system, a 2D image restoration was used to boost the signal to noise ratio of sensor. Empowered by the algorithm, the average temperature standard deviation along the sensing fiber of 7.89 °C was obtained based on a single frame data in 1 millisecond. A new record of temperature resolution of 0.62 °C was demonstrated in only 1 second frame data traces, which enables a fast response capacity.
RESUMEN
Nanostructured gold has attracted significant interest from materials science, chemistry, optics and photonics, and biology due to their extraordinary potential for manipulating visible and near-infrared light through the excitation of plasmon resonances. However, gold nanostructures are rarely measured experimentally in their plasmonic properties and hardly used for high-temperature applications because of the inherent instability in mass and shape due to the high surface energy at elevated temperatures. In this work, the first direct observation of thermally excited surface plasmons in gold nanorods at 1100 K is demonstrated. By coupling with an optical fiber in the near-field, the thermally excited surface plasmons from gold nanorods can be converted into the propagating modes in the optical fiber and experimentally characterized in a remote manner. This fiber-coupled technique can effectively characterize the near-field thermoplasmonic emission from gold nanorods. A direct simulation scheme is also developed to quantitively understand the thermal emission from the array of gold nanorods. The experimental work in conjunction with the direct simulation results paves the way of using gold nanostructures as high-temperature plasmonic nanomaterials, which has important implications in thermal energy conversion, thermal emission control, and chemical sensing.
RESUMEN
Sensors for harsh environments must exhibit robust sensing response and considerable thermal and chemical stability. We report the exploration of a novel all-alumina nanostructured sapphire optical fiber (NSOF) embedded with Au nanorods (Au NRs) for plasmonics-based sensing at high temperatures. Temperature dependence of the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of Au NRs was studied in conjunction with numerical calculations using the Drude model. It was found that LSPR of Au NRs changes markedly with temperature, red shifting and increasing in transmission amplitude as the temperature increases. Furthermore, this variation is highly localized through tunneling by overlapping the near-field of thin cladding and sapphire optical fiber. The NSOF embedded with Au NRs has the potential for sensing in advanced energy generation systems.
RESUMEN
The effect of misalignments of different optical components in the laser heated pedestal growth apparatus have been modeled using Zemax optical design software. By isolating the misalignments causing the non-uniformity in the melt zone, the alignment of the components was fine-tuned. Using this optimized alignment, low-loss YAG single crystal fibers of 120 µm diameter were grown, with total attenuation loss as low as 0.5 dB/m at 1064 nm.
RESUMEN
Single-crystal YAG (Y3Al5O12) fibers have been grown by the laser heated pedestal growth technique with losses as low as 0.3 dB/m at 1.06 µm. These YAG fibers are as long as about 60 cm with diameters around 330 µm. The early fibers were grown from unoriented YAG seed fibers and these fibers exhibited facet steps or ridges on the surface of the fiber. However, recently we have grown fibers using an oriented seed to grow step-free fibers. Scattering losses made on the fibers indicate that the scattering losses are equal to about 30% of the total loss.
RESUMEN
Lasing was demonstrated for the first time at 2.09 µm in 0.5% Holmium (Ho) doped YAG single crystal fiber (SCF) fabricated using the Laser Heated Pedestal Growth (LHPG) method. Output power of 23.5 W with 67.5% optical-to-optical slope efficiency is, to the best of our knowledge, the highest output power achieved at 2 µm from a SCF fabricated using LHPG. With continued improvement in the quality of the SCF and better thermal management, output power of few 100s W and higher, especially in the 2 µm spectral region, is realizable in the very near future.