Cargando…

The Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature Monitoring

Thanks to their characteristics, optical fiber sensors are an ideal solution for sensing applications at cryogenic temperatures, such as the monitoring of superconducting devices. Their applicability at such temperatures, however, is not immediate as optical fibers exhibit a non-linear thermal respo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Marcon, Leonardo, Chiuchiolo, Antonella, Castaldo, Bernardo, Bajas, Hugues, Galtarossa, Andrea, Bajko, Marta, Palmieri, Luca
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22114009
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2812516
_version_ 1780973343335251968
author Marcon, Leonardo
Chiuchiolo, Antonella
Castaldo, Bernardo
Bajas, Hugues
Galtarossa, Andrea
Bajko, Marta
Palmieri, Luca
author_facet Marcon, Leonardo
Chiuchiolo, Antonella
Castaldo, Bernardo
Bajas, Hugues
Galtarossa, Andrea
Bajko, Marta
Palmieri, Luca
author_sort Marcon, Leonardo
collection CERN
description Thanks to their characteristics, optical fiber sensors are an ideal solution for sensing applications at cryogenic temperatures, such as the monitoring of superconducting devices. Their applicability at such temperatures, however, is not immediate as optical fibers exhibit a non-linear thermal response which becomes rapidly negligible below 50 K. A thorough analysis of such a response down to cryogenic temperatures then becomes necessary to correctly translate the optical interrogation readings into the actual fiber temperature. Moreover, to increase the fiber sensitivity down to a few kelvin, special coatings can be used. In this manuscript we described the thermal responses experimental characterization of four commercially available optical fiber samples with different polymeric coatings in the temperature range from 5 to 300 : two with acrylate coatings of different thickness, one with a polyimide coating and one with a polyether–ether–ketone (PEEK) coating. Multiple thermal cycles were performed consecutively to guarantee the quality of the results and a proper estimate of the sensitivity of the various samples. Finally, we experimentally validated the quality of the measured thermal responses by monitoring the cool down of a dummy superconducting link from room temperature to approximately 50 using two fibers coated, respectively, in acrylate and PEEK. The temperatures measured with the fibers agreed and matched those obtained by standard electronic sensors, providing, at the same time, further insight in to the cool-down evolution along the cryostat.
id cern-2812516
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
record_format invenio
spelling cern-28125162022-06-17T19:10:49Zdoi:10.3390/s22114009http://cds.cern.ch/record/2812516engMarcon, LeonardoChiuchiolo, AntonellaCastaldo, BernardoBajas, HuguesGaltarossa, AndreaBajko, MartaPalmieri, LucaThe Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature MonitoringDetectors and Experimental TechniquesThanks to their characteristics, optical fiber sensors are an ideal solution for sensing applications at cryogenic temperatures, such as the monitoring of superconducting devices. Their applicability at such temperatures, however, is not immediate as optical fibers exhibit a non-linear thermal response which becomes rapidly negligible below 50 K. A thorough analysis of such a response down to cryogenic temperatures then becomes necessary to correctly translate the optical interrogation readings into the actual fiber temperature. Moreover, to increase the fiber sensitivity down to a few kelvin, special coatings can be used. In this manuscript we described the thermal responses experimental characterization of four commercially available optical fiber samples with different polymeric coatings in the temperature range from 5 to 300 : two with acrylate coatings of different thickness, one with a polyimide coating and one with a polyether–ether–ketone (PEEK) coating. Multiple thermal cycles were performed consecutively to guarantee the quality of the results and a proper estimate of the sensitivity of the various samples. Finally, we experimentally validated the quality of the measured thermal responses by monitoring the cool down of a dummy superconducting link from room temperature to approximately 50 using two fibers coated, respectively, in acrylate and PEEK. The temperatures measured with the fibers agreed and matched those obtained by standard electronic sensors, providing, at the same time, further insight in to the cool-down evolution along the cryostat.oai:cds.cern.ch:28125162022
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Marcon, Leonardo
Chiuchiolo, Antonella
Castaldo, Bernardo
Bajas, Hugues
Galtarossa, Andrea
Bajko, Marta
Palmieri, Luca
The Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature Monitoring
title The Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature Monitoring
title_full The Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature Monitoring
title_fullStr The Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature Monitoring
title_full_unstemmed The Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature Monitoring
title_short The Characterization of Optical Fibers for Distributed Cryogenic Temperature Monitoring
title_sort characterization of optical fibers for distributed cryogenic temperature monitoring
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22114009
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2812516
work_keys_str_mv AT marconleonardo thecharacterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT chiuchioloantonella thecharacterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT castaldobernardo thecharacterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT bajashugues thecharacterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT galtarossaandrea thecharacterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT bajkomarta thecharacterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT palmieriluca thecharacterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT marconleonardo characterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT chiuchioloantonella characterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT castaldobernardo characterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT bajashugues characterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT galtarossaandrea characterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT bajkomarta characterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring
AT palmieriluca characterizationofopticalfibersfordistributedcryogenictemperaturemonitoring