Highly sensitive surface plasmon resonance humidity sensor based on a polyvinyl-alcohol-coated polymer optical fiber

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Abstract

A surface-plasmon-resonance-based fiber device is proposed for highly sensitive relative humidity (RH) sensing and human breath monitoring. The device is fabricated by using a polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) film and gold coating on the flat surface of a side-polished polymer optical fiber. The thickness and refractive index of the PVA coating are sensitive to environmental humidity, and thus the resonant wavelength of the proposed device exhibits a redshift as the RH increases. Experimental results demonstrate an average sensitivity of 4.98 nm/RH% across an ambient RH ranging from 40% to 90%. In particular, the sensor exhibits a linear response between 75% and 90% RH, with a sensitivity of 10.15 nm/RH%. The device is suitable for human breath tests and shows an average wavelength shift of up to 228.20 nm, which is 10 times larger than that of a silica-fiber-based humidity sensor. The corresponding response and recovery times are determined to be 0.44 s and 0.86 s, respectively. The proposed sensor has significant potential for a variety of practical applications, such as intensive care and human health analysis.

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Wang, Y., Wang, J., Shao, Y., Liao, C., & Wang, Y. (2021). Highly sensitive surface plasmon resonance humidity sensor based on a polyvinyl-alcohol-coated polymer optical fiber. Biosensors, 11(11). https://doi.org/10.3390/bios11110461

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