“…Many of the aforementioned techniques are performed as minimally invasive interventional procedures, in which highly miniaturised and flexible sensors are needed for integration into catheters, needles and guidewires. Fibre-optics can readily meet these requirements, and fibre-optic temperature sensing approaches include fibre Bragg gratings (FBG) and long period fibre gratings (LPFG) [ 32 , 33 , 34 , 35 , 36 , 37 ]; polymer-based [ 38 , 39 , 40 , 41 , 42 , 43 , 44 , 45 , 46 , 47 ], inorganic [ 48 , 49 , 50 ] and microbubble-based [ 51 ] Fabry–Pérot (FP) cavities; multimode interference (MMI) segments [ 52 , 53 , 54 , 55 , 56 , 57 , 58 ]; infiltrated photonic crystal fibre and hollow-core fibre [ 59 , 60 ]; fluorescence-based methods [ 22 , 23 , 24 ]; and sensors based on polymer optical fibres [ 61 , 62 , 63 , 64 ]. The wide variety of geometries and materials employed in these sensors can lead to very different response times, from sub-millisecond for a silicon FP cavity [ 50 ] to hundreds of milliseconds for packaged FBGs [ 18 , 36 ].…”