Paper
27 April 2009 Radiation sensitivity of Bragg gratings written with femtosecond IR lasers
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Abstract
The radiation sensitivity of Bragg gratings written with a femtosecond IR laser was measured for the first time. Type I-IR and type II-IR gratings were written into hydrogen loaded as well as unloaded fibers of distinctly different radiation sensitivity with the intention to find extremely radiation resistant gratings for temperature or stress measurements in radiation environments, as well as very radiation sensitive ones for radiation dose measurements. With a highly radiation-hard F-doped fiber we found a radiation-induced wavelength shift between about 3 and 7 pm after a dose of 100 kGy. These are the lowest shifts observed so far. In such fibers it is very difficult to write gratings with an UV laser. However, gratings made of the highly radiation-sensitive fibers only showed shifts of about the same size as those made of the quite radiation-insensitive Corning SMF-28e fiber. This was already observed with UV laser gratings written in such fibers.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Dan Grobnic, Henning Henschel, Stefan K. Hoeffgen, Jochen Kuhnhenn, Stephen J. Mihailov, and Udo Weinand "Radiation sensitivity of Bragg gratings written with femtosecond IR lasers", Proc. SPIE 7316, Fiber Optic Sensors and Applications VI, 73160C (27 April 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.818157
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Cited by 22 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Fiber Bragg gratings

Optical fibers

Ultraviolet radiation

Annealing

Hydrogen

Temperature metrology

Femtosecond phenomena

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