| Literature DB >> 23012508 |
Abstract
Rayleigh, Brillouin and Raman scatterings in fibers result from the interaction of photons with local material characteristic features like density, temperature and strain. For example an acoustic/mechanical wave generates a dynamic density variation; such a variation may be affected by local temperature, strain, vibration and birefringence. By detecting changes in the amplitude, frequency and phase of light scattered along a fiber, one can realize a distributed fiber sensor for measuring localized temperature, strain, vibration and birefringence over lengths ranging from meters to one hundred kilometers. Such a measurement can be made in the time domain or frequency domain to resolve location information. With coherent detection of the scattered light one can observe changes in birefringence and beat length for fibers and devices. The progress on state of the art technology for sensing performance, in terms of spatial resolution and limitations on sensing length is reviewed. These distributed sensors can be used for disaster prevention in the civil structural monitoring of pipelines, bridges, dams and railroads. A sensor with centimeter spatial resolution and high precision measurement of temperature, strain, vibration and birefringence can find applications in aerospace smart structures, material processing, and the characterization of optical materials and devices.Entities:
Keywords: Raman scattering; Rayleigh scattering; birefringence; brillouin scattering; distributed sensors; fiber optic sensors; optical frequency domain reflectrometer (OFDR); optical time domain reflectrometer (OTDR); strain; temperature; vibration
Year: 2012 PMID: 23012508 PMCID: PMC3444066 DOI: 10.3390/s120708601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1.Typical spontaneous scattering spectrum from solid state matter.
Figure 2.Schematic diagram for the spontaneous Rayleigh scattering process.
Figure 3.Asymmetric Brillouin spectrum property of SMF28e, SMF28e+ and LEAF vs. position.
Statistics of PDF of Brillouin frequency with different input SOPs.
| SOP1 | 10,861.01 | 0.045 | −0.18 | 2.88 | 10,861.03 | 0.18 |
| SOP2 | 10,861.00 | 0.043 | 0.27 | 2.70 | 10,860.98 | 0.17 |
| Scrambled | 10,861.0 | 0.040 | 0.043 | 3.21 | 10,861.0 | 0.16 |
Figure 4.Experimental setup of OFDR.
Figure 5.(a) Differential Brillouin signal (intensity) [32]; and (b) Brillouin signal loss as a function of pulse width (here refers to the shorter pulse of the pulse pair) for 0.1 and 0.2 ns pulse width difference.
Figure 6.Experimental results of the differential gain for the pulse width larger than phonon lifetime (a) and smaller than phone lifetime (b).
Performance chart for distributed sensors.
| 2 cm (2 km) [ | 1–2 cm [ | ∼1 m | 0.4 m [ | ∼1 mm [ | ∼0.5 m [ | |
| 150–200 km | 20 m | 20–50 km | 900 m [ | ∼35 m [ | 1–2 km | |
| 2–5 min | 10+ min | 1–5 min | <3 min | (0.01–3) s | <1 ms | |
| Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | No | |
| 1–2 °C [ | 1 °C | 2–3 °C | 0.8 °C [ | 0.1 °C [ | No | |
| 20 με | 10 με | 60 με | No | 1 με [ | No | |
| yes | No | No | No | 30 Hz [ | Yes | |
| Determined by fiber property | Determined by fiber property | Determined by fiber property | Relative measurement | Reference is needed for every measurement | Relative measurement | |
| Two DFB lasers [ | Three lasers | One narrow linewidth laser | One high power laser | One narrow linewidth tuneable laser | One narrow linewidth laser | |
| Broadband [ | Broadband | High sensitivity | High sensitivity | High sensitivity | High sensitivity | |
| Direct | Direct | Coherent | Direct | Coherent | Coherent [ |
Yokogawa Electric Corporation.