@article{oai:oist.repo.nii.ac.jp:00002364, author = {Liu, Dejun and Li, Wei and Wu, Qiang and Zhao, Haoyu and Ling, Fengzi and Tian, Ke and Shen, Changyu and Han, Wei and Wei, Fangfang and Farrell, Gerald and Semenova, Yuliya and Wang, Pengfei}, issue = {1}, journal = {Sensors and Actuators A: Physical}, month = {Sep}, note = {Liquid level measurement in microfluidics is challenging, where a sensor with ultra-high sensitivity but miniature in nature is demanded. In this paper, we propose for the first time a microsized fiber sensor structure in both diameter and length for microfluidics applications, which is capable of sub-micrometer scale liquid level measurement. The sensor is simply fabricated by fusion splicing a short section of a hollow core fiber (HCF) between two singlemode fibers (SMFs). HCFs with different air core diameters (10 µm, 20 µm, 30 µm) were investigated and it is found that for a given length of HCF stronger resonant dips were excited in transmission for the HCF with a smaller air core diameter. Thus the HCF structure with an air core diameter of 10 µm (HCF-10) was used for demonstration of high sensitivity liquid level measurement in microfluidics. Simultaneous excitation of both Anti-Resonant Reflecting Optical Waveguide (ARROW) guiding mechanism and Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) in transmission is demonstrated in such an HCF-10 structure when HCF-10 is longer than the critical length. A maximum sensitivity of 0.042 dB/µm (corresponding to a calculated liquid level resolution of ~0.23 µm) was experimentally achieved with an HCF-10 length of ~867 µm, which is three times higher than that of the previous reported to date of the most sensitive fiber optic liquid level sensors based on intensity modulation. In addition, the proposed sensor shows good repeatability of measurement and a very low cross sensitivity to changes in the surrounding refractive index.}, title = {High sensitivity liquid level sensor for microfluidic applications using a hollow core fiber structure}, volume = {332-1}, year = {2021} }