Scientific Reports (May 2023)

Compact high-resolution FBG strain interrogator based on laser-written 3D scattering structure in flat optical fiber

  • Przemyslaw Falak,
  • Timothy Lee,
  • Shahrzad Zahertar,
  • Bo Shi,
  • Bruno Moog,
  • Gilberto Brambilla,
  • Christopher Holmes,
  • Martynas Beresna

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-35708-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract We demonstrate a fiber Bragg grating (FBG) strain interrogator based on a scattering medium to generate stable and deterministic speckle patterns, calibrated with applied strain, which are highly dependent on the FBG back-reflection spectral components. The strong wavelength-dependency of speckle patterns was previously used for high resolution wavemeters where scattering effectively folds the optical path, but instability makes practical realization of such devices difficult. Here, a new approach is demonstrated by utilizing femtosecond laser-written scatterers inside flat optical fiber, to enhance mechanical stability. By inscribing 15 planes of pseudo-randomized nanovoids (714 $$\times$$ × 500 voids per plane) as a 3D array in a 1 $$\times$$ × 0.7 $$\times$$ × 0.16 mm volume, the intrinsic stability and compactness of the device was improved. Operating as a wavemeter, it remained stable for at least 60 h with 45 pm resolution over the wavelength range of 1040–1056 nm. As a reflection mode FBG interrogator, after calibrating speckle patterns by applying tensile strain to the FBG, the device is capable of detecting microstrain changes in the range of 0–200 $$\mu \epsilon$$ μ ϵ with a standard error of 4 $$\mu \epsilon$$ μ ϵ , limited by the translation stage step size. All these characteristics make it an interesting technology for filling the niche of low-cost, high-resolution wavemeters and interrogators which offer the best available trade-off between resolution, compactness, price and stability.