| Literature DB >> 29649148 |
Mohamed A S Zaghloul1, Mohan Wang2, Giovanni Milione3, Ming-Jun Li4, Shenping Li5, Yue-Kai Huang6, Ting Wang7, Kevin P Chen8.
Abstract
Brillouin optical time domain analysis is the sensing of temperature and strain changes along an optical fiber by measuring the frequency shift changes of Brillouin backscattering. Because frequency shift changes are a linear combination of temperature and strain changes, their discrimination is a challenge. Here, a multicore optical fiber that has two cores is fabricated. The differences between the cores' temperature and strain coefficients are such that temperature (strain) changes can be discriminated with error amplification factors of 4.57 °C/MHz (69.11 μ ϵ /MHz), which is 2.63 (3.67) times lower than previously demonstrated. As proof of principle, using the multicore optical fiber and a commercial Brillouin optical time domain analyzer, the temperature (strain) changes of a thermally expanding metal cylinder are discriminated with an error of 0.24% (3.7%).Entities:
Keywords: Brillouin Scattering; fiber characterization; fiber optics sensors; optical time domain reflectometry
Year: 2018 PMID: 29649148 PMCID: PMC5948480 DOI: 10.3390/s18041176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1(a) Cross-section of multicore optical fiber that has two cores (cores 1 and 2) as described in the text; (b) theoretical calculation of the difference between the frequency shifts of cores 1 and 2 as a function of the difference between their deltas as described in the text; (c) measured frequency shifts of cores 1 and 2 as described in the text.
Figure 2(a) Experimental determination of temperature coefficients ( and )—plots and best fit lines of and as a function of as described in the text; (b) experimental determination of strain coefficients ( and )—plots and best fit lines of and as a function of as described in the text.
Temperature and strain coefficients (, , , and ) and error amplification factors ( and ) (first column) in this study; (second column) Reference [11]; and (third column) Reference [12], as described in the text.
| Here | Reference [ | Reference [ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.9710 | 1.0300 | 1.1500 | |
| 0.9593 | 1.0800 | 1.0500 | |
| 0.0532 | 0.0517 | 0.0486 | |
| 0.0729 | 0.0485 | 0.0489 | |
| 4.57 | 12.05 | 13.25 | |
| 69.11 | 253.77 | 299.18 |
Figure 3(a) Photograph of the Al cylinder with the dual-core samples wound around the cylinder; (b) Brillouin frequency shift of one sample at different temperatures and strains caused by the metallic cylinder expansion.
Figure 4Measurements obtained from dual-core samples for (a) temperatures plotted against thermocouple-measured temperatures, and (b) strains versus finite-element computed strains. The deviation of these slopes from unity indicates the system error.
(First column) Temperature of metal cylinder as measured by thermocouple; (second column) temperature of metal cylinder as measured using the multicore optical fibers; (third column) strain exerted by metal cylinder as determined by FE analysis; and (fourth column) strain exerted by metal cylinder as measured using the multicore optical fibers as described in the text.
| Temperature [°C] (Thermocouple) | Temperature [°C] (Multicore Optical Fiber) | Strain [µϵ] (FE Analysis) | Strain [µϵ] (Multicore Optical Fiber) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 36.10 | 35.39 | 92.37 | 117.51 |
| 41.00 | 41.01 | 167.80 | 208.72 |
| 48.90 | 48.85 | 289.41 | 233.07 |
| 53.50 | 53.49 | 360.22 | 395.28 |
| 60.15 | 59.87 | 462.59 | 471.80 |
| 64.35 | 64.21 | 527.25 | 574.16 |
| 71.25 | 70.63 | 633.47 | 632.45 |
| 75.60 | 75.57 | 700.43 | 773.47 |
| 81.30 | 81.16 | 788.18 | 815.03 |