| Literature DB >> 30347740 |
Ke Cui1,2, Zhongjie Ren3,4, Jieyu Qian5,6, Wenjun Peng7,8, Rihong Zhu9,10.
Abstract
Interferometric fiber-optic sensors are often organized in the form of large-scale arrays by lending the technique of time division multiplexing (TDM) to reduce the system cost. Discriminating the time windows for different sensor units is the prerequisite to successfully demodulate the sensing message, but it traditionally calls for a very time-consuming manual calibration process. To combat this problem, a novel automatic time window locating method is proposed in this paper. It introduces the concept of shape function and carries out the cross-correlation operation between the shape function and the sensor signal. The shape function is defined as the function whose curve profile reflects the main data characteristics of the sensor signal. The time window information is then extracted from the correlation result. This whole process is carried out automatically by the interrogation controller of the sensor system without any manual intervene. Experiments are conducted to validate this method. The proposed method can greatly reduce the complexity of locating time windows in large-scale TDM sensor arrays, and make the practical use of the TDM scheme much more convenient.Entities:
Keywords: cross correlation; fiber-optic sensor; interrogation controller; time division multiplexing (TDM); time window
Year: 2018 PMID: 30347740 PMCID: PMC6211038 DOI: 10.3390/s18103548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1The principle of the RPB scheme.
Figure 2Time windows for a practical TDM sensor array.
Figure 3The automatic time window locating method. (a) the implementation procedure; (b) the temporal implementation result example.
Figure 4The experimental configuration of a four-sensor TDM array.
Figure 5Implementation of the cross-correlation-based automatic locating method. (a) the original waveform; (b) the zoomed in first two periods of (a); (c) the calculated waveform; (d) the curve combining the auxiliary shape function wave; (e) the zoomed in first two periods of (d); (f) the calculated cross-correlation results.
Figure 6The implementation result of the automatic time window locating method. (a) the extracted three intensities; (b) the Lissajous curve of versus .