RESUMO
To the best of our knowledge, a novel extensible multi-wavelength (EMW) method to interrogate arbitrary cavities in low-fineness fiber-optic multi-cavity Fabry-Pérot interferometric (LFMFPI) sensors is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. Based on the derived model of the LFMFPI sensor with any amount of cascaded cavities, theoretically, variation in each cavity of a LFMFPI sensor can be extracted simultaneously once the necessary parameters are acquired in advance. The feasibility of this method is successfully demonstrated in simulations and experiments utilizing LFMFPI sensors. In experiments with the LFMFPI sensor, optical path differences (OPD) of 78â nm and 2.95â µm introduced by temperature variation in two cavities, and the OPD induced by vibration with the amplitude from 5.891â nm to 38.116â nm were extracted, respectively. The EMW method is potential in multi-parameter sensing for pressure, vibration, and temperature.
RESUMO
Fluorogenic RNA aptamers are in vitro-selected RNA molecules capable of binding to specific fluorophores, significantly increasing their intrinsic fluorescence. Over the past decade, the color palette of fluorescent RNA aptamers has greatly expanded. The emergence and development of these fluorogenic RNA aptamers has introduced a powerful approach for visualizing RNA localization and transport with high spatiotemporal resolution in live cells. To date, a variety of tertiary structures of fluorogenic RNA aptamers have been determined using X-ray crystallography or NMR spectroscopy. Many of these fluorogenic RNA aptamers feature base quadruples or base triples in their fluorophore-binding sites. This review summarizes the structure-based investigations of fluorogenic RNA aptamers, with a focus on their overall folds, ligand-binding pockets and fluorescence activation mechanisms. Additionally, the exploration of how structures guide rational optimization to enhance RNA visualization techniques is discussed.
RESUMO
In this paper, a fiber-optic Fabry-Perot (F-P) vibration sensor that can work at 800 °C is proposed. The F-P interferometer is composed of an upper surface of inertial mass placed parallel to the end face of the optical fiber. The sensor was prepared by ultraviolet-laser ablation and three-layer direct-bonding technology. Theoretically, the sensor has a sensitivity of 0.883 nm/g and a resonant frequency of 20.911 kHz. The experimental results show that the sensitivity of the sensor is 0.876 nm/g in the range of 2 g to 20 g at an operating frequency of 200 Hz at 20 °C. The nonlinearity was evaluated from 20 °C to 800 °C with a nonlinear error of 0.87%. In addition, the z-axis sensitivity of the sensor was 25 times higher than that of the x-axis and y-axis. The vibration sensor will have wide high-temperature engineering-application prospects.
RESUMO
This paper demonstrates, for the first time, a novel demodulation technique that can be applied for interrogating a shortest cavity in multi-cavity Fabry-Pérot (F-P) sensors. In this demodulation technique, using an amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) light source and two optical fiber broadband filters, the interference only occurs in a shortest F-P cavity that is shorter than the half of the coherence length. Using a signal calibration algorithm, two low-coherence interference optical signals with similar coherence lengths were calibrated to obtain two quadrature signals. Then, the change in the cavity length of the shortest F-P cavity was interrogated by the two quadrature signals and the arctangent algorithm. The experimental results show that the demodulation technique successfully extracted 1 kHz and 500â Hz vibration signals with 39.28 µm and 64.84 µm initial cavity lengths, respectively, in a multi-cavity F-P interferometer. The demodulation speed is up to 500 kHz, and the demodulation technique makes it possible for multi-cavity F-P sensors to measure dynamic and static parameters simultaneously. The results show that the demodulation technique has wide application potential in the dynamic measurement of multi-cavity F-P sensors.
RESUMO
An LC wireless passive pressure sensor based on a single-crystalline magnesium oxide (MgO) MEMS processing technique is proposed and experimentally demonstrated for applications in environmental conditions of 900 °C. Compared to other high-temperature resistant materials, MgO was selected as the sensor substrate material for the first time in the field of wireless passive sensing because of its ultra-high melting point (2800 °C) and excellent mechanical properties at elevated temperatures. The sensor mainly consists of inductance coils and an embedded sealed cavity. The cavity length decreases with the applied pressure, leading to a monotonic variation in the resonant frequency of the sensor, which can be retrieved wirelessly via a readout antenna. The capacitor cavity was fabricated using a MgO MEMS technique. This MEMS processing technique, including the wet chemical etching and direct bonding process, can improve the operating temperature of the sensor. The experimental results indicate that the proposed sensor can stably operate at an ambient environment of 22-900 °C and 0-700 kPa, and the pressure sensitivity of this sensor at room temperature is 14.52 kHz/kPa. In addition, the sensor with a simple fabrication process shows high potential for practical engineering applications in harsh environments.
RESUMO
A novel Fabry-Perot (F-P) demodulation technique based on least square fitting for arbitrary reflectivity F-P sensors is proposed. The demodulation method was simulated and analyzed to verify feasibility of the algorithm. Two different finesse F-P interferometers constructed with a reflector bracket were used to make the stability experiments and the stepping experiments. The results show that the demodulation technique can interrogate the cavity length of F-P interferometers with different fineness in a wide range, and the demodulation error is less than 12 nm.
RESUMO
A reflective intensity-modulated fiber-optic sensor based on microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) for pressure measurements is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. The sensor consists of two multimode optical fibers with a spherical end, a quartz tube with dual holes, a silicon sensitive diaphragm, and a high borosilicate glass substrate (HBGS). The integrated sensor has a high sensitivity due to the MEMS technique and the spherical end of the fiber. The results show that the sensor achieves a pressure sensitivity of approximately 0.139 mV/kPa. The temperature coefficient of the proposed sensor is about 0.87 mV/°C over the range of 20 °C to 150 °C. Furthermore, due to the intensity mechanism, the sensor has a relatively simple demodulation system and can respond to high-frequency pressure in real time. The dynamic response of the sensor was verified in a 1 kHz sinusoidal pressure environment at room temperature.
RESUMO
A high-temperature-resistance single-crystal magnesium oxide (MgO) extrinsic Fabry-Perot (FP) interferometer (EFPI) fiber-optic vibration sensor is proposed and experimentally demonstrated at 1000 °C. Due to the excellent thermal properties (melting point > 2800 °C) and optical properties (transmittance ≥ 90%), MgO is chosen as the ideal material to be placed in the high-temperature testing area. The combination of wet chemical etching and direct bonding is used to construct an all-MgO sensor head, which is favorable to reduce the temperature gradient inside the sensor structure and avoid sensor failure. A temperature decoupling method is proposed to eliminate the cross-sensitivity between temperature and vibration, improving the accuracy of vibration detection. The experimental results show that the sensor is stable at 20-1000 °C and 2-20 g, with a sensitivity of 0.0073 rad (20 °C). The maximum nonlinearity error of the vibration sensor measurement after temperature decoupling is 1.17%. The sensor with a high temperature resistance and outstanding dynamic performance has the potential for applications in testing aero-engines and gas turbine engines.
RESUMO
High-temperature accelerometers have been widely used in aerospace, nuclear reactors, automobile technologies, etc. In this paper, a fiber-optic Fabry-Perot accelerometer (FOFPA) with a cantilever beam for high temperature is designed and experimentally demonstrated. The FOFPA is formed by bonding an all-silica in-line fiber Fabry-Perot etalon (ILFFPE) to one surface of the uniform cantilever beam with the lumped mass at the free end for acceleration measurement. The all silica in-line fiber FP etalon is made by welding two gold-coat single-mode fiber (GSMF) and a hollow silica glass tube (HST). The research results indicate that the sensitivity of the FOFPA is 0.02328rad/g, and the resonance frequency is 1146.6 Hz in the range of 1 g ~ 10 g. The high-temperature performance of the FOFPA was also evaluated. From 20 °C to 800 °C, the temperature drift is about 0.3178 nm/°C. The FOFPA has the potential of being applicable in higher temperatures compared to conventional accelerometers.