Abstract

An integrated optical sensor specifically sensitive to ozone has been developed by vacuum evaporating a tapered thin film of copper tetra- t-butylphthalocyanine (CuPc t ) through a mask onto a slab waveguide made by K +–Na + ion-exchange in glass. A pair of photoresist gratings fabricated on the waveguide offer the sensor a good long-term stability in optical coupling. The evaporated dye film composed of CuPc t H-aggregates has a large absorption at 633 nm and a high-index of refraction relative to that of glass substrates. Therefore, the waveguiding mode excited with a 633 nm laser beam in the CuPc t film-coved waveguide is highly attenuated. The CuPc t film is very stable in air but ozone exposure at room temperature can result in a rapid and irreversible decoloration of the film. In the presence of a given concentration of ozone in the ambient air about the senor, the output light intensity was detected to linearly increase with time. It has been demonstrated that the sensor containing a 15 mm long and tens-of-nanometers thick dye film can detect 33 ppb ozone in air at room temperature.

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