Abstract
Humidity monitoring is essential in industrial and scientific scenarios, yet remains challenging for compact EMI (electromagnetic interference)-immune sensors with high sensitivity and robust stability. A novel fiber Bragg grating (FBG) humidity sensor was developed, which incorporated LiCl@UIO-66 microfillers within a poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM) hydrogel matrix. Structural characterization using X-ray diffraction (XRD), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), and Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy confirms that LiCl is confined or nanodispersed within intact UIO-66, and that interfacial ion-dipole/hydrogen-bonding exists between the composite and water. Systematic variation in coating time (30-720 min) reveals monotonic growth of the total wavelength shift with diminishing returns. A coating time of 4 h was found to yield a wavelength shift of approximately 0.38-0.40 nm, representing about 82% of the maximum shift observed at 12 h, while maintaining good quasi-linearity and favorable kinetics. Calibration demonstrates sensitivities of 6.7 pm/%RH for LiCl@UIO-66_33 and 10.6 pm/%RH for LiCl@UIO-66_51 over ~0-95%RH. Stepwise tests show response times t90 of ≈14 min for both composites, versus ≈30 min for UIO-66 and ≈55 min for neat PNIPAM. Long-term measurements on the 51 wt.% device are stable over the first ~20 days, with only slow drift thereafter, and repeated humidity cycling is reversible. The wavelength decreases monotonically during drying while settling time increases toward low RH. The synergy of hydrogel-MOF-salt underpins high sensitivity, accelerated transport, and practical stability, offering a scalable route to high-performance optical humidity sensing.