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Surface plasmon resonance hydrogen sensor using an optical fibre*

X Bévenot et al 2002 Meas. Sci. Technol. 13 118-124   doi: 10.1088/0957-0233/13/1/315  Help

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X Bévenot1, A Trouillet1, C Veillas1, H Gagnaire1 and M Clément2
1 Laboratoire Traitement du Signal et Instrumentation, Université Jean Monnet Saint-Etienne, 23, rue du Dr Paul Michelon, F-42023 Saint-Etienne Cedex 2, France (www.univ-st-etienne.fr/tsi)
2 SNECMA Moteurs, Forêt de Vernon, BP 802, F-27208 Vernon Cedex, France (www.snecma.fr)
*This paper was presented at the 14th International Conference on Optical Fibre Sensors, held at the Giorgio Cini Foundation, Venice, Italy on 11-13 October 2000.
E-mail: alain.trouillet@univ-st-etienne.fr

Abstract. An optical fibre surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensor has been developed for the detection of hydrogen leakages. A thin palladium layer deposited on the bare core of a multimode fibre was used as the transducer. In this device, modification of the SPR is due to variation in the complex permittivity of palladium in contact with gaseous hydrogen. This effect is enhanced by using selective injection of high-order modes in the fibre via a collimated beam with non-normal incidence on the input end of the fibre. Measurements of concentrations as low as 0.8% of hydrogen in pure nitrogen have been found to be possible. The response time varies between 3 s for pure hydrogen and 300 s for the lowest concentrations. Such a large range can be explained by the two different crystallographic phases of the palladium-hydrogen system. Moreover, the response of the sensor is dependent on the length of the sensing area. In preliminary experiments, it has been possible to split the sensing area in order to achieve a two-point detection device.

Keywords: surface plasmon resonance, optical fibre sensor, hydrogen detection, gas concentration

Print publication: Issue 1 (January 2002)
Received 2 January 2001, in final form and accepted for publication 1 November 2001
Published 12 December 2001

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