| Literature DB >> 31948079 |
Zhihua Yu1,2, Yunfei Cai1,2, Daili Mo1,2.
Abstract
Adaptive filtering has the advantages of real-time processing, small computational complexity, and good adaptability and robustness. It has been widely used in communication, navigation, signal processing, optical fiber sensing, and other fields. In this paper, by adding an interferometer with the same parameters as the signal interferometer as the reference channel, the sensing signal of the interferometric fiber-optic hydrophone is denoised by two adaptive filtering schemes based on the least mean square (LMS) algorithm and the normalized least mean square (NLMS) algorithm respectively. The results show that the LMS algorithm is superior to the NLMS algorithm in reducing total harmonic distortion, improving the signal-to-noise ratio and filtering effect.Entities:
Keywords: 3 × 3 coupler; adaptive filtering; fiber optic hydrophone; least mean square (LMS); normalized least mean square (NLMS)
Year: 2020 PMID: 31948079 PMCID: PMC6983103 DOI: 10.3390/s20010301
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1System structure of noise generation and signal detection of interferometric fiber optic hydrophone.
Figure 2Schematic diagram of interferometric demodulation method using the 3 × 3 coupler.
Figure 3Adaptive filter schematic.
Figure 4Demodulated signal before and after filtering. (a) The original signal, (b) the signal before filtering, (c) the signal filtered by normalized least mean square (NLMS) algorithms, and (d) the signal filtered by least mean square (LMS) algorithms.
Figure 5Power spectrum before and after filtering. (a) Power spectrum of the signal before filtering, (b) power spectrum of the signal filtered by NLMS algorithms, and (c) power spectrum of the signal filtered by LMS algorithms.
Figure 6Comparison of filtering effects of two algorithms in terms of total harmonic distortion (THD) and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
Test results of NLMS algorithm with different signal frequencies (unit: dB).
| Frequency | THD (Before) | THD (After) | Difference | SNR (Before) | SNR (After) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 Hz | −14.26 | −6.72 | 7.54 | −16.66 | 10.2 | 26.86 |
| 50 Hz | −14.48 | −8.62 | 5.86 | −5.03 | 6.53 | 11.56 |
| 100 Hz | −1.5 | −9.72 | −8.22 | −2.15 | 8.85 | 11 |
| 500 Hz | −8.35 | −21.05 | −12.7 | −0.6 | 18.76 | 19.36 |
| 1000 Hz | −11.23 | −22.69 | −11.46 | −0.97 | 20.81 | 21.78 |
| 2000 Hz | −14.07 | −22.46 | −8.39 | −2.22 | 20.72 | 22.94 |
| 5000 Hz | −1.34 | −25.39 | −24.05 | −7.15 | 19.67 | 26.82 |
Test results of LMS algorithm with different signal frequencies (unit: dB).
| Frequency | THD (Before) | THD (After) | Difference | SNR (Before) | SNR (After) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10 Hz | −14.26 | −5.68 | 8.58 | −16.66 | 8.96 | 25.62 |
| 50 Hz | −14.48 | −8.01 | 6.47 | −5.03 | 6.37 | 11.4 |
| 100 Hz | −1.5 | −9.23 | −7.73 | −2.15 | 8.8 | 10.95 |
| 500 Hz | −8.35 | −26.52 | −18.17 | −0.6 | 22 | 22.6 |
| 1000 Hz | −11.23 | −29.9 | −18.67 | −0.97 | 24.05 | 25.02 |
| 2000 Hz | −14.07 | −30.72 | −16.65 | −2.22 | 24 | 26.22 |
| 5000 Hz | −1.34 | −39.39 | −38.05 | −7.15 | 20.51 | 27.66 |
Figure 7Comparison of filtering effects of two algorithms in terms of THD and SNR.
Test results of NLMS algorithm with different signal amplitudes (unit: dB).
| Amplitude | THD (Before) | THD (After) | Difference | SNR (Before) | SNR (After) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 V | −12.14 | −22.32 | −10.18 | −4.71 | 19.38 | 24.09 |
| 2 V | −11.23 | −22.69 | −11.46 | −0.97 | 20.81 | 21.78 |
| 3 V | −15.08 | −22.07 | −6.99 | 4.51 | 23.87 | 19.36 |
| 4 V | −14.71 | −21 | −6.29 | 6.21 | 24.49 | 18.28 |
| 5 V | −17.85 | −22.49 | −4.64 | 7.59 | 25.2 | 17.61 |
Test results of LMS algorithm with different signal amplitudes (unit: dB).
| Amplitude | THD (Before) | THD (After) | Difference | SNR (Before) | SNR (After) | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 V | −12.14 | −26.54 | −14.4 | −4.71 | 22.01 | 26.72 |
| 2 V | −11.23 | −29.9 | −18.67 | −0.97 | 24.05 | 25.02 |
| 3 V | −15.08 | −26.68 | −11.6 | 4.51 | 26.99 | 22.48 |
| 4 V | −14.71 | −28.02 | −13.31 | 6.21 | 27.87 | 21.66 |
| 5 V | −17.85 | −30.47 | −12.62 | 7.59 | 28.29 | 20.7 |