Paper
16 November 2004 Fiber optic sensors for the monitoring of cryogenic spacecraft tank structures
Ines Latka, Wolfgang Ecke, Bernd Höfer, Christoph Chojetzki, Arnd Reutlinger
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Abstract
Sensors for the detection of hydrogen, which is very volatile, extremely flammable and highly explosive, are needed in many fields, for example in nuclear power plants, in launch vehicles for human space flight, in hydrogen production plants, and fuel cells. To enhance the safety level it seems appropriate to use optical sensors instead of electronic ones. In the presentation, investigations concerning the use of fiber optic Bragg grating (FBG) sensors as part of the surveillance system of liquid fuel tanks will be described. The sensors are supposed to measure strain and temperature when embedded in the inner tank wall and to detect hydrogen leakage. To fulfill this task the temperature and strain sensors have to prove their functionality down to minimum temperatures of 20K. As the dn/dT for quartz decreases to very low values, the FBG temperature transducer has to be bonded to a substrate with sufficiently high coefficient of thermal expansion also under cryogenic conditions. As the only applicable solution a high-expansion glass has been found, which in connection with specific fiber coating and bonding materials for the strain-transducer fulfils all the sensor requirements. The hydrogen sensor utilizes the expansion of palladium in an atmosphere containing hydrogen and consists in our new sensor configuration of a palladium foil bonded to a special-shaped fiber. Experimental results for concentration ranges 0-4%vol H2 and temperature ranges from -40°C to +80°C show the parameters of application of a hydrogen leakage detection system.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Ines Latka, Wolfgang Ecke, Bernd Höfer, Christoph Chojetzki, and Arnd Reutlinger "Fiber optic sensors for the monitoring of cryogenic spacecraft tank structures", Proc. SPIE 5579, Photonics North 2004: Photonic Applications in Telecommunications, Sensors, Software, and Lasers, (16 November 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.567353
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CITATIONS
Cited by 13 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Hydrogen

Palladium

Fiber Bragg gratings

Temperature sensors

Temperature metrology

Fiber optics sensors

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