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Dive into the research topics where Xinwei Lan is active.

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Featured researches published by Xinwei Lan.


Optics Letters | 2013

Optical fiber magnetic field sensor based on single-mode–multimode–single-mode structure and magnetic fluid

Yaofei Chen; Qun Han; Tiegen Liu; Xinwei Lan; Hai Xiao

An optical fiber magnetic field sensor based on the single-mode-multimode-single-mode (SMS) structure and magnetic fluid (MF) is proposed and demonstrated. By using a piece of no-core fiber as the multimode waveguide in the SMS structure and MF sealed in a capillary tube as the magnetic sensitive media, which totally immersing the no-core fiber, an all-fiber magnetic sensor was fabricated. Interrogation of the magnetic field strength can be achieved either by measuring the dip wavelength shift of the transmission spectrum or by detecting the transmission loss at a specific wavelength. A demonstration sensor with sensitivities up to 905 pm/mT and 0.748 dB/mT was fabricated and investigated. A theoretical model for the design of the proposed device was developed and numerical simulations were performed.


IEEE Photonics Technology Letters | 2009

Fiber Inline Core–Cladding-Mode Mach–Zehnder Interferometer Fabricated by Two-Point CO

Tao Wei; Xinwei Lan; Hai Xiao

We report a fiber inline Mach-Zehnder-type core-cladding-mode interferometer fabricated by two-point CO2 laser irradiations on a single-mode fiber. The laser irradiations caused efficient light coupling from the core mode to the lower order cladding modes and vise versa. High-quality interference spectra with a fringe visibility of about 20 dB were observed for four different interferometer lengths (5, 10, 20, and 40 mm). The temperature sensitivity of the device with a length of 5 mm was measured to be 0.0817 nm/degC. The sensitivity for refractive index measurement of the device was comparable with a long-period fiber grating of LP04 cladding mode.


Optics Letters | 2013

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Yinan Zhang; Lei Yuan; Xinwei Lan; Amardeep Kaur; Jie Huang; Hai Xiao

In this Letter, we report on a fiber-optic Fabry-Perot interferometric pressure sensor with its external diaphragm surface thinned and roughened by a femtosecond laser. The laser-roughened surface helps to eliminate outer reflections from the external diaphragm surface and makes the sensor immune to variations in the ambient refractive index. The sensor is demonstrated to measure pressure in a high-temperature environment with low-temperature dependence.


Optics Letters | 2012

Laser Irradiations

Jie Huang; Xinwei Lan; Hanzheng Wang; Lei Yuan; Tao Wei; Zhan Gao; Hai Xiao

This Letter reports a polymer optical fiber (POF) based large strain sensor based on the multimode interference (MMI) theory for the application of structural health monitoring. A section of POFs is sandwiched between two silica single mode fibers to construct a single-mode-multimode-single-mode structure that produces a MMI spectrum. The strain sensing mechanism of the device was investigated and experimentally verified. A large dynamic range of 2×10(4) με (2%) and a detection limit of 33 µε have been demonstrated.


Optics Letters | 2009

High-temperature fiber-optic Fabry–Perot interferometric pressure sensor fabricated by femtosecond laser

Xinwei Lan; Yukun Han; Tao Wei; Yinan Zhang; Lan Jiang; Hai-Lung Tsai; Hai Xiao

We report what we believe to be a new method to fabricate surface enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) fiber probe by direct femtosecond laser micromachining. Direct femtosecond laser ablations resulted in nanostructures on the cleaved endface of a multimode optical fiber with a 105/125 microm core/cladding diameter. The laser-ablated fiber endface was SERS activated by silver chemical plating. High-quality SERS signal was detected using Rhodamine 6G molecules (10(-8)-10(-6) M solutions) via back excitation with the fiber length of up to 1 m. The fiber SERS probe was compared with a planar fused silica substrate at a front excitation. The long lead-in fiber length and the backexcitation/collection setup make the SERS probe promising for remote sensing applications.


Optics Letters | 2012

Polymer optical fiber for large strain measurement based on multimode interference

Xinwei Lan; Jie Huang; Qun Han; Tao Wei; Zhan Gao; Hongmin Jiang; Junhang Dong; Hai Xiao

Zeolite thin films were synthesized on the claddingless multimode portion of a singlemode-multimode-singlemode (SMS) fiber structure to construct a chemical vapor sensor. The zeolite-coated SMS structure was inserted into a fiber ring amplifier to produce a laser line. Combining the strong molecular adsorption capability of the nanoporous zeolite and the high signal-to-noise ratio of the fiber laser, the device was demonstrated for chemical vapor sensing with a low detection limit.


Applied Optics | 2008

Surface-enhanced Raman-scattering fiber probe fabricated by femtosecond laser.

Yanjun Li; Tao Wei; John Montoya; Sandeep V. Saini; Xinwei Lan; Xiling Tang; Junhang Dong; Hai Xiao

We report a new method to measure the CO(2)-laser-irradiation-induced refractive index modulation in the core of a single-mode optical fiber for the purpose of design and fabrication of long-period fiber gratings (LPFGs) without applying tension. Using an optical fiber Fabry-Perot interferometer, the laser-induced axial refractive index perturbation was measured. We found that the CO(2)-laser-irradiation-induced refractive index change in the fiber core had a negative value and that the magnitude was a sensitive function of the laser exposure time following almost a linear relation. Under the assumption of a Gaussian-shaped refractive index modulation profile and based on the first two terms of Fourier series approximation, the measured refractive index perturbations were used to simulate the LPFG transmission spectra. LPFGs with the same laser exposure parameters were fabricated without applying tension, and their spectra were compared with those obtained by simulations.


Optics Express | 2014

Fiber ring laser interrogated zeolite-coated singlemode-multimode-singlemode structure for trace chemical detection

Jie Huang; Xinwei Lan; Ming Luo; Hai Xiao

This paper reports a spatially continuous distributed fiber optic sensing technique using optical carrier based microwave interferometry (OCMI), in which many optical interferometers with the same or different optical path differences are interrogated in the microwave domain and their locations can be unambiguously determined. The concept is demonstrated using cascaded weak optical reflectors along a single optical fiber, where any two arbitrary reflectors are paired to define a low-finesse Fabry-Perot interferometer. While spatially continuous (i.e., no dark zone), fully distributed strain measurement was used as an example to demonstrate the capability, the proposed concept may also be implemented on other types of waveguide or free-space interferometers and used for distributed measurement of various physical, chemical and biological quantities.


IEEE Photonics Journal | 2010

Measurement of CO2-laser-irradiation-induced refractive index modulation in single-mode fiber toward long-period fiber grating design and fabrication.

Yinan Zhang; Yanjun Li; Tao Wei; Xinwei Lan; Ying Huang; Genda Chen; Hai Xiao

We report a fringe visibility-enhanced extrinsic Fabry-Perot interferometer (EFPI) by fusion splicing a quarter-pitch length of a graded-index fiber (GIF) to the lead-in single mode fiber (SMF). The performance of the GIF collimator is theoretically analyzed using a ray matrix model and experimentally verified through beam divergence angle measurements. The fringe visibility of the GIF-collimated EFPI is measured as a function of the cavity length and compared with that of a regular SMF-EFPI. At the cavity length of 500 m, the fringe visibility of the GIF-EFPI is 0.8, while that of the SMF-EFPI is only 0.2. The visibility-enhanced GIF-EFPI may provide a better signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for applications where a large dynamic range is desired.


Analytical Chemistry | 2009

Spatially continuous distributed fiber optic sensing using optical carrier based microwave interferometry

Xiling Tang; Kurtis Remmel; Xinwei Lan; Jiangdong Deng; Hai Xiao; Junhang Dong

Small size fiber optic devices integrated with chemically sensitive photonic materials are emerging as a new class of high-performance optical chemical sensor that have the potential to meet many analytical challenges in future clean energy systems and environmental management. Here, we report the integration of a proton conducting perovskite oxide thin film with a long-period fiber grating (LPFG) device for high-temperature in situ measurement of bulk hydrogen in fossil- and biomass-derived syngas. The perovskite-type Sr(Ce(0.8)Zr(0.1))Y(0.1)O(2.95) (SCZY) nanocrystalline thin film is coated on the 125 microm diameter LPFG by a facile polymeric precursor route. This fiber optic sensor (FOS) operates by monitoring the LPFG resonant wavelength (lambda(R)), which is a function of the refractive index of the perovskite oxide overcoat. At high temperature, the types and population of the ionic and electronic defects in the SCZY structure depend on the surrounding hydrogen partial pressure. Thus, varying the H(2) concentration changes the SCZY film refractive index and light absorbing characteristics that in turn shifts the lambda(R) of the LPFG. The SCZY-coated LPFG sensor has been demonstrated for bulk hydrogen measurement at 500 degrees C for its sensitivity, stability/reversibility, and H(2)-selectivity over other relevant small gases including CO, CH(4), CO(2), H(2)O, and H(2)S, etc.

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Hai Xiao

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Jie Huang

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Tao Wei

University of Rhode Island

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Yinan Zhang

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Qun Han

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Zhan Gao

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Baokai Cheng

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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Amardeep Kaur

Missouri University of Science and Technology

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