Strain sensitivity enhancement in suspended core fiber tapers

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Abstract

Suspended core fiber tapers with different cross sections (with diameters from 70 μm to 120 μm) are produced by filament heating. Before obtaining the taper, the spectral behavior of the suspended core fiber is a multimode interference structure. When the taper is made, an intermodal interference between a few modes is observed. This effect is clearly visible for low taper core dimensions. Since the core and cladding do not collapse, two taper regions exist, one in the core and the other in the cladding. The cladding taper does not affect the light transmission, only the core is reduced to a microtaper. The spectral response of the microtaper based-suspended core fiber is similar to a beat of two interferometers. The strain is applied to the microtaper, and with the reduction in the transverse area, an increase in sensitivity is observed. When the taper is immersed in a liquid with a different index of refraction or subjected to temperature variations, no spectral change occurs. © 2012 The Author(s).

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André, R. M., Silva, S. O., Becker, M., Schuster, K., Rothardt, M., Bartelt, H., … Frazão, O. (2013). Strain sensitivity enhancement in suspended core fiber tapers. Photonic Sensors, 3(2), 118–123. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13320-012-0059-2

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