Jack A. Barnes
Queen's University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Jack A. Barnes.
IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2008
Zhaobing Tian; Scott S.-H. Yam; Jack A. Barnes; Wojtek J. Bock; Patricia Greig; James M. Fraser; Hans-Peter Loock; Richard D. Oleschuk
A novel refractive index (RI) sensor based on a fiber Mach-Zehnder interferometer was realized by concatenating two single-mode fiber tapers separated by a middle section. The proposed device had a minimum insertion loss of 3 dB and maximum interferometric extinction ratio over 20 dB. The resolution (0.171 nm) of the two-taper sensor to its surrounding RI change (0.01) was found to be comparable to that (0.252 nm) of similar structures made from an identical long-period gratings pair, and its ease of fabrication makes it a low-cost alternative to existing sensing applications.
Sensors | 2010
Helen Waechter; Jessica Litman; Adrienne H. Cheung; Jack A. Barnes; Hans-Peter Loock
Waveguide-based cavity ring-down spectroscopy (CRD) can be used for quantitative measurements of chemical concentrations in small amounts of liquid, in gases or in films. The change in ring-down time can be correlated to analyte concentration when using fiber optic sensing elements that change their attenuation in dependence of either sample absorption or refractive index. Two types of fiber cavities, i.e., fiber loops and fiber strands containing reflective elements, are distinguished. Both types of cavities were coupled to a variety of chemical sensor elements, which are discussed and compared.
Analyst | 2008
Jack A. Barnes; Marian Dreher; Krista L. Plett; R. Stephen Brown; Cathleen M. Crudden; Hans-Peter Loock
A chemical sensor based on a coated long-period grating has been prepared and characterized. Designer coatings based on polydimethylsiloxane were prepared by the incorporation of diphenylsiloxane and titanium cross-linker in order to provide enhanced sensitivity for a variety of key environmental pollutants and optimal refractive index of the coating. Upon microextraction of the analyte into the polymer matrix, an increase in the refractive index of the coating resulted in a change in the attenuation spectrum of the long-period grating. The grating was interrogated using ring-down detection as a means to amplify the optical loss and to gain stability against misalignment and power fluctuations. Chemical differentiation of cyclohexane and xylene was achieved and a detection limit of 300 ppm of xylene vapour was realized.
Optics Express | 2011
S. Avino; Jack A. Barnes; G. Gagliardi; Xijia Gu; David Gutstein; James R. Mester; Costa Nicholaou; Hans-Peter Loock
A low-noise transducer based on a fiber Fabry-Perot (FFP) cavity was used as a pickup for an acoustic guitar. A distributed feedback (DFB) laser was locked to a 25 MHz-wide resonance of the FFP cavity using the Pound-Drever-Hall method. The correction signal was used as the audio output and was preamplified and sampled at up to 96 kHz. The pickup system is largely immune against optical noise sources, exhibits a flat frequency response from the infrasound region to about 25 kHz, and has a distortion-free audio output range of about 50 dB.
Optics Express | 2008
Jack A. Barnes; B. Carver; James M. Fraser; G. Gagliardi; Hans-Peter Loock; Zhaobing Tian; Mark W. Wilson; Scott S.-H. Yam; O. Yastrubshak
The optical loss of whispering gallery modes of resonantly excited microresonator spheres is determined by optical lifetime measurements. The phase-shift cavity ring-down technique is used to extract ring-down times and optical loss from the difference in amplitude modulation phase between the light entering the microresonator and light scattered from the microresonator. In addition, the phase lag of the light exiting the waveguide, which was used to couple light into the resonator, was measured. The intensity and phase measurements were fully described by a model that assumed interference of the cavity modes with the light propagating in the waveguide.
Sensors | 2010
G. Gagliardi; M. Salza; Pietro Ferraro; Edmond Chehura; Ralph P. Tatam; Tarun Kumar Gangopadhyay; Nicholas Ballard; Daniel Paz-Soldan; Jack A. Barnes; Hans-Peter Loock; Timothy T.-Y. Lam; Jong H. Chow; Paolo De Natale
An overview on high-resolution and fast interrogation of optical-fiber sensors relying on laser reflection spectroscopy is given. Fiber Bragg-gratings (FBGs) and FBG resonators built in fibers of different types are used for strain, temperature and acceleration measurements using heterodyne-detection and optical frequency-locking techniques. Silica fiber-ring cavities are used for chemical sensing based on evanescent-wave spectroscopy. Various arrangements for signal recovery and noise reduction, as an extension of most typical spectroscopic techniques, are illustrated and results on detection performances are presented.
Analyst | 2012
Hengameh Omrani; Jack A. Barnes; Alexander Dudelzak; Hans-Peter Loock; Helen Waechter
Excitation emission matrix (EEM) and cavity ring-down (CRD) spectral signatures have been used to detect and quantitatively assess contamination of jet fuels with aero-turbine lubricating oil. The EEM spectrometer has been fiber-coupled to permit in situ measurements of jet turbine oil contamination of jet fuel. Parallel Factor (PARAFAC) analysis as well as Principal Component Analysis and Regression (PCA/PCR) were used to quantify oil contamination in a range from the limit of detection (10 ppm) to 1000 ppm. Fiber-loop cavity ring-down spectroscopy using a pulsed 355 nm laser was used to quantify the oil contamination in the range of 400 ppm to 100,000 ppm. Both methods in combination therefore permit the detection of oil contamination with a linear dynamic range of about 10,000.
Optica | 2014
Jack A. Barnes; G. Gagliardi; Hans-Peter Loock
Conventional absorption spectroscopy is not nearly sensitive enough for quantitative overtone measurements on submonolayer coatings. While cavity-enhanced absorption detection methods using microresonators have the potential to provide quantitative absorption cross sections of even weakly absorbing submonolayer films, this potential has not yet been fully realized. To determine the absorption cross section of a submonolayer film of ethylene diamine (EDA) on a silica microsphere resonator, we use phase-shift cavity ringdown spectroscopy simultaneously on near-IR radiation that is Rayleigh backscattered from the microsphere and transmitted through the coupling fiber taper. We then independently determine both the coupling coefficient and the optical loss within the resonator. Together with a coincident measurement of the wavelength frequency shift, an absolute overtone absorption cross section of adsorbed EDA, at submonolayer coverage, was obtained and was compared to the bulk value. The smallest quantifiable absorption cross section is σmin=2.7×10−12 cm2. This absorption cross section is comparable to the extinction coefficients of, e.g., single gold nanoparticles or aerosol particles. We therefore propose that the present method is also a viable route to absolute extinction measurements of single particles.
Optics Express | 2016
Nicholas L. P. Andrews; Rachel J. Ross; Dorit Munzke; Camiel van Hoorn; Andrew Brzezinski; Jack A. Barnes; Oliver Reich; Hans-Peter Loock
We describe an in-fiber interferometer based on a gas-filled hollow-core photonic crystal fiber. Expressions for the sensitivity, figure of merit and refractive index resolution are derived, and values are experimentally measured and theoretically validated using mode field calculations. The refractive indices of nine monoatomic and molecular gases are measured with a resolution of δns < 10-6.
Optics Express | 2014
Nicholas L. P. Andrews; Amy G. MacLean; John Saunders; Jack A. Barnes; Hans-Peter Loock; Mohammed Saad; Chenglai Jia; Kishor Ramaswamy; Lawrence R. Chen
A fiber laser using a thulium-doped ZBLAN gain medium was used to generate laser radiation simultaneously at 1461, 1505 and 1874 nm, with > 5 mW output power at each of the wavelengths. The laser was used to quantify the near-infrared absorption of liquid water in acetone. Additionally, near-infrared spectra were recorded using a broad band source and were interpreted using parallel factor (PARAFAC) analysis to rationalize the concentration-dependent peak shifts.