Optical sensor for the detection of ice formation and other chemical species
First Claim
1. An optical sensor for detecting ice formation, comprising:
- a light guiding means having a refractive index N1 greater than the refractive index of ice at 0°
C. and less than the refractive index of water at 0°
C.;
stripes of a clad material having a refractive index N2 substantially equal to the refractive index of ice at 0°
C. and formed in a spaced parallel relationship on the light guiding means at a spacing between stripes that is effective to hold water in place when water contacts the sensor.
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Accused Products
Abstract
An ice sensor for the remote rapid indication of ice formation or the presence of ice is a fiber optic "switch", activated by ice but not by water, and based on the difference in optical properties between water and ice. The approach is to construct a "fiber optic" which itself is the ice sensor. The fiber optic sensor (FOS) is designed so that no light is transmitted when water is present but as soon as ice begins to form, light is relayed. Thus ice switches on the light- In addition, limited quantitative information can be made available on the rate of ice formation. Alternatively the sensor can be formed of another type optical waveguide instead of an optical fiber. The ice sensor is formed by placing spaced stripes of a clad material on a fiber optic core, or other waveguide structure, where the clad has a refractive index close to ice and the core has an index greater than the clad but less than water. It is best to index match the core to the clad for optimal transmission when ice forms in the gaps between the clad stripes. The advantages of the ice sensor include: specific, sensitive, real-time response, small, light weight, inexpensive, requires no line-of-sight, EMI immune, rugged and flexible. The instrumentation needed to operate the ice FOS is simple, small, light weight, inexpensive, easy to operate, battery powered - optional, rugged, reliable and amenable to telemetry of information.
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Citations
19 Claims
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1. An optical sensor for detecting ice formation, comprising:
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a light guiding means having a refractive index N1 greater than the refractive index of ice at 0°
C. and less than the refractive index of water at 0°
C.;stripes of a clad material having a refractive index N2 substantially equal to the refractive index of ice at 0°
C. and formed in a spaced parallel relationship on the light guiding means at a spacing between stripes that is effective to hold water in place when water contacts the sensor. - View Dependent Claims (2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9)
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10. A method of detecting ice formation, comprising:
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forming an optical sensor of a light guiding means having a refractive index greater than the refractive index of ice at 0°
C. and less than the refractive index of water at 0°
C. with a plurality of spaced parallel stripes of clad material on the light guiding means, the clad material having a refractive index substantially equal to the refractive index of ice at 0°
C., the stripes being spaced at an effective distance to hold water in place when water contacts the sensor;inputting light into the sensor; detecting light transmitted through the sensor whereby an intermediate level signal is detected when the sensor is dry and exposed to air, a minimum level signal is obtained when the sensor is wet by water and a maximum level signal is obtained when ice forms on the sensor. - View Dependent Claims (11, 12, 13)
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14. An optical sensor for detecting a chemical species, comprising:
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a light guiding means; stripes of a clad material having a refractive index less than the light guiding means and substantially equal to the refractive index of the chemical species and formed in a spaced parallel relationship on the light guiding means. - View Dependent Claims (15, 16, 17, 18, 19)
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Specification