Abstract
The use of thermally regenerated gratings for monitoring harsh environments is becoming increasingly attractive due to their thermal resilience and high precision. They are a unique type of Bragg grating created through annealing UV-laser written Fiber Bragg Gratings (FBGs) at high temperatures (above 600°C) and they have been demonstrated to operate at temperatures over 1000 °C in oxygen free environments [1]. In this work we report two new observations. Firstly, a second phase thermal regeneration process at temperatures above 650 °C and secondly an enhanced thermal response for these second phase regenerated gratings of over 140%. Uniquely, fabrication of the gratings was made through a small spot Direct Ultraviolet Writing (DUW) process. This utilizes a high precision four-axis stage system and a frequency double argon-ion continuous wave 244 nm laser that is split and recombined at a focus to form a ~7 μm diameter interferometric spot [2]. A series of 46 different FBGs, from 1400 to 1620 nm, were written into a single non-hydrogen loaded double clad germanium doped 4 μm core fiber (Nufern GF4A). Gratings in the series were written with fluences ranging from 0.05 kJ/cm2 up to 90 kJ/cm2.
© 2017 IEEE
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