Abstract
Abstract Photonic sensors offer the possibility of purely optical measurement in contact thermometry. In this work, silicon-based ring resonators were used for this purpose. These can be manufactured with a high degree of reproducibility and uniformity due to the established semiconductor manufacturing process. For the precise characterisation of these photonic sensors, a measurement setup was developed which allows laser-based spectroscopy around 1550 nm and stable temperature control from 5 °C to 95 °C. This was characterised in detail and the resulting uncertainty influences of both the measuring set-up and the data processing were quantified. The determined temperature stability at 20 °C is better than 0.51 mK for the typical acquisition time of 10 s for a 100 nm spectrum. For a measurement of >24 h at 30 °C a standard deviation of 2.6 mK could be achieved. A hydrogen cyanide reference gas cell was used for traceable in-situ correction of the wavelength. The determined correction function has a typical uncertainty of 0.6 pm. The resonance peaks of the ring resonators showed a high optical quality of 157 000 in the average with a filter depth of up to 20 dB in the wavelength range from 1525 nm to 1565 nm. When comparing different methods for the determination of the central wavelength of the resonance peaks, an uncertainty of 0.3 pm could be identified. A temperature-dependent shift of the resonance peaks of approx. 72 pm/K was determined. This temperature sensitivity leads together with the analysed uncertainty contributions to a repeatability of better than 10 mK in the analysed temperature range from 10 °C to 90 °C.
Highlights
Conventional temperature measurements in the industrially relevant temperature range from about –200 °C to 850 °C are usually based on measuring the electrical resistance
A typical approach to determine the position of the ring resonator peak is by using a Lorentzian function to fit the resonance [13]
Since the peak shape of the ring resonators is not determined by first principles, like the gas absorption spectra, there exists no pre-defined fit model
Summary
Conventional temperature measurements in the industrially relevant temperature range from about –200 °C to 850 °C (according to IEC-60751) are usually based on measuring the electrical resistance In the field of fibre-optic sensing, devices for temperature sensing using FBGs are already commercially available They are suitable to determine temperature with an uncertainty in the range of a few 100 mK [5, 6]. These sensors are mainly limited by their temperature dependent shift of about 10 pm/K together with the uncertainty in peak centre detection due to the typical FWHM (full width half maximum) of about 100 pm. Another solution are distributed fibre optic techniques based on backscattering processes 2 Experimental setup for the temperature-dependent optical characterisation of photonic micro resonators
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