Abstract

An embedded spherical dot taper structure (EDT) based on the MZI principle is proposed in this paper, which is mainly fabricated by using two special arc discharges in the preparation process. The proposed structure involves two specialized arc discharge techniques. First, an oversaturated discharge fusion process creates a micro-arc spherical area on the fiber end face to form the first link type. Second, an unsaturated discharge-pulling taper fusion joint creates a local micro-extrusion operation on this micro-arc fiber end face to form the second link. The thermal stress from instantaneous discharge causes a reverse spherical expansion zone to form in the end face structure, similar to the micromachining of long-period fiber gratings that use local CO2 laser etching to create modulated zones. The study involves a mathematical and theoretical analysis of how geometric parameters in the spherical modulation zone impact the structure's characteristic spectrum. The research demonstrates the potential for this structure to function as a light-intensity modulated strain sensor device through both theoretical and experimental means. As per the experimental findings, the optimized structure displays a high level of strain sensing sensitivity at 0.03 dB/µε and temperature sensing sensitivity of 73 pm/°C (20°C-75°C) and 169 pm/°C (75°C-120°C). Additionally, it possesses excellent cross-sensitivity at only ∼0.0015 µε/°C. Therefore, this sensor presents a favorable option for strain and temperature synchronization sensing and monitoring components, and exhibits notable application prospects in precision engineering, which encompasses mechanical manufacturing, the power and electrical industry, healthcare domain, and certain specialized areas of small-scale precision engineering.

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