| Literature DB >> 26020163 |
Qingyuan Zhao1, Lan Xia2, Chao Wan1, Junhui Hu3, Tao Jia1, Min Gu1, Labao Zhang1, Lin Kang1, Jian Chen1, Xuping Zhang2, Peiheng Wu1.
Abstract
In classical optical time domain reflectometries (OTDRs), for sensing an 200-km-long fiber, the optical pulses launched are as wide as tens of microseconds to get enough signal-to-noise ratio, while it results in a two-point resolution of kilometers. To both reach long sensing distance and sub-kilometer resolution, we demonstrated a long-haul photon-counting OTDR using a superconducting nanowire single-photon detector. In a 40-minute-long measurement, we obtained a dynamic range of 46.9 dB, corresponding to a maximum sensing distance of 246.8 km, at a two-point resolution of 0.1 km. The time for measuring fiber after 100 km was reduced to one minute, while the fiber end at 217 km was still distinguished well from noise. After reducing the pulse width to 100 ns, the experimental two-point resolution was improved to 20 m while the maximum sensing distance was 209.47 km.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26020163 PMCID: PMC4447072 DOI: 10.1038/srep10441
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1ν-OTDR setup using an superconducting nanowire single-photon detector. (a) Schematic setup of a ν-OTDR using an SNSPD. The attenuator was connected for adjusting the power of incident optical pulses to prevent the detector from saturating when the initial fiber was measured. (b) Under-tested fiber. There are two fiber spools fold together on the top right. The fiber spool sat under the blue spool was not connected. (c) The “capacitor-grounded” readout circuit for reading out SNSPD’s outputs.
Figure 2Counting rate (CR) versus incident light power (Pin) of the SNSPD. Fitting curve (red solid line) applied on the symbols is in good agreement with the experimental data. The counting rates at the lower and upper plateaus give the dark counts and the maximum counting rates, respectively.
Figure 3Long-haul OTDR traces. (a) OTDR traces of six spools of fiber with a total length of 217 km. The six fiber spools and the noise floors are marked in different colors. The trace on top is from the first 30-minute-long measurement without attenuating optical pulses while the bottom one is from the second 10-minute-long measurement after attenuating optical pulses by 40 dB. The dashed lines are linear corrections of the saturated curves. (b) An enlarged view of the initial 100-km-long OTDR trace in the first measurement, where reflection peaks can be seen. The oscillation of the curve comes from the current reset dynamics of SNSPDs.
Figure 4High two-point resolution OTDR traces. (a) OTDR trace from launching 100-ns-wide optical pulses. The overall measurements were taken from the two-step measurement. The dashed red line is from a linear correction of the saturated region at the beginning. (b) An enlarged view of the Fresnel reflection peak in the dashed box in (a) at 96.62 km. The vertical axis changes to linear scale of the total sampling count in each time bin. The FWHM of the peak gives a two-point resolution of 20 m.
Figure 5Fluctuations of OTDR traces versus measurement times. (a) OTDR traces from taking the first measurements 60 s (orange), 600 s (blue), and 1800 s (red). As the measurement time increases, both signal counts and noise counts go up. But, the signal counts increase faster than the noise counts, thus the dynamic range increases. (b) The dynamic ranges (dynR) versus measurement time tm. (c)~(e) Variations of the OTDR traces from 175 km to 215 km at different measurement times. Scales of the vertical axes are proportional to . In each case, the experimental variations are well confined between the upper boundary (blue) and lower boundary (red). Both boundaries are calculated from a Poisson distribution statistics.