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1.IntroductionOptical fiber sensors have attracted great attention in refractive index (RI) sensing applications due to their compactness and high sensitivity. There are many methods for constructing in-fiber RI sensors, including fiber Bragg grating (FBG),1 long-period grating (LPG),2 photonic crystal fiber (PCF),3 and single mode-multimode-single mode fiber structure.4 Recently, many kinds of Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) structures have been applied to the design and fabrication of in-fiber RI sensors, such as the two-taper MZI,5 core-offset attenuators,6 LPG pairs,7,8 an improved sandwiched-taper MZI,9 and PCF-based MZI structure.10 A PCF-based LPG structure has been reported to have an excellent sensitivity: .11 Although the sensitivity of these sensors is satisfactorily high, fabricating the grating-based (FBG or LPG) sensors often requires precise and expensive phase masks and stringent photolithographic procedures, so the cost is very high for practical application. In this paper, a novel RI sensor based on a fiber MZI composed of two core-offset attenuators and two abrupt tapers is proposed. The structure can be simply fabricated by a conventional fusion splicer and shows high sensitivity to surrounding RI change. 2.PrinciplesFigure 1(a) shows the schematic diagram of the MZI formed by large lateral offset fusion splicing between two abrupt tapers. First, the input light () is split into two portions at the first abrupt taper: one () through the core and the other () through the cladding. At the first lateral offset splice joint, the optical signal is split into three optical paths: along the core, at the cladding of the intermediate SMF, and in the air near the cladding surface of the intermediate SMF. Then they are recombined at the second splice joint. Finally, the light traveling in the cladding and the light traveling in the core are coupled back into the core at the second abrupt taper to form interference fringes, which can be detected by measuring . Since a light is transmitting through the structure, the effective propagation constant of the cladding modes could be obviously changed as the RI of the environment changes, so that we can use the fiber MZI as a RI sensor by measuring the phase shift of the interference fringe. As described by Xia et al.12 the interference signal reaches its minimum when the phase difference between cladding and core modes satisfies the following condition: where is the wavelength of the interference spectrum dip, is the effective RI of the core mode, is the effective RI of the ’th order cladding mode, is the interferometer length, and is an integer. Therefore, the sensitivity can be expressed as: where is the RI of the surrounding medium, and is the difference of the effective RIs of the core and the cladding mode.3.Experiment and ResultsA standard telecommunication single-mode optical fiber (Corning, SMF-28e) is used to fabricate the MZI structure shown in Fig. 1 by a conventional fusion splicer, and the fabrication steps of the taper structure and large lateral offset fusion are same as that described by Li et al. and by Duan et al.13,14 Figure 2 shows a microscopic image of the taper structure (top) and the large lateral offset fusion (bottom). The parameters of two tapers are almost the same: a waist diameter of μm and a taper length of μm. There is a large offset of μm on the two lateral offset fusions. The distance between the two offsets is about 3 cm, and the length of the MZI is about 6 cm. Here, it should be noted that, as demonstrated in Tian and Yam,15 the two lateral offset splice joints should have the offsets in the same or opposite direction along the same axis. Otherwise, the modes coupled by the first lateral offset splicing joint will not be coupled back to the core by the second one, and the interference pattern will not be obtained. Next, the fiber MZI is fixed and straightened on the platform to measure its response characteristics. A broadband light source (SL3700, B&A Technology, Shang Hai, China) is used to inject a light into the MZI, and its transmission spectrum is recorded by an optical spectrum analyzer (Agilent 86142B). When the MZI structure is immersed into deionized water (), the attenuation spectrum is obtained by subtracting the source spectrum from the transmission spectrum, as shown in Fig. 3. As can be seen from Fig. 3, there is a little inhomogeneity in the spectrum, because more than two modes are involved in the interference pattern. In addition, it can be seen from the transmission spectrum that the MZI structure has a relatively large insertion loss. Thus, a light source with larger optical input power, such as 8 mW, is needed in our experiment. In order to determine the cladding modes that construct the interference, the fast Fourier transform (FFT) of wavelength spectra is performed to get its corresponding spatial frequency spectra. As can be seen from Fig. 4, several mainly cladding modes were indeed excited dominantly, and there are also weakly excited cladding modes. To test the RI sensitivity of the MZI sensor, the dip around the 1550-nm wavelength is recorded. The MZI structure is totally immersed into a glycerin solution, whose RI value can be changed by raising or lowering the concentration of glycerin. The RI of the glycerin solution is measured by the Abbe refractometer with the accuracy 0.001, and the RI values of the testing solution are increased from 1.3350 to 1.3706. The recorded transmission spectrum is shown in Fig. 5(a), and the dip has an obviously red shift with the increase of the external RI. As shown in Fig. 5(b), the response of the MZI sensor to RI change demonstrates good linearity and high sensitivity. The slope of linear fitting (i.e., the sensitivity) is , which is similar to that of the sensor based on a fiber taper seeded long-period grating pair with a taper length of 16 mm,16 and it is much higher than that of the sensor based on a tapered single-mode thin-core diameter fiber with a sensitivity of .17 The red shift of the dip in the transmission spectrum corresponding to the RI increase of the glycerin solution can be explained as follows: For lower-order cladding modes, the change of is negative with the RI increasing in the external environment, and will have a blue shift. In the case of higher-order cladding mode, the change of is positive with the RI increasing, resulting in shifts to longer wavelengths. A similar mechanism is demonstrated in the sensitivity characteristic of long-period fiber gratings, where is negative for lower-order modes and positive for higher-order modes.18 It should be noted that the temperature is kept constant (19°C), and the sensor is kept straight during all the measurements. 4.ConclusionsIn summary, we have demonstrated a novel RI sensor based on a fiber MZI formed by large lateral offset fusion splicing between two abrupt tapers. The response characteristic of the sensor is investigated, and the sensitivity of is obtained, which is three to six times higher than that of previous fiber sensors with only a pair of tapers or two offset junctions. The simply fabricated method of our structure makes it low-cost and promising in the sensing applications. AcknowledgmentsThis work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (60977048, 61275153), the Zhejiang Natural Science Foundation (LY12A04002), the International Collaboration Project of Ningbo (2010D10018), the Ningbo Natural Science Foundation (2011A61090, 2012A610107) and the K. C. Wong Magna Fund of Ningbo University, China. ReferencesA. Iadiciccoet al.,
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