1. Technical Field
The present invention relates to sensing Brillouin scattering in optical fibers and more particularly, to a distributed and dynamical Brillouin sensing.
2. Discussion of the Related Art
The use of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) for fiber optic strain and temperature distributed sensors is well known in the art. One of the most widely used approaches is the classical method of Brillouin optical time-domain analysis technique (BOTDA), where a pump pulse interacts with a counter propagating probe wave. Strain and temperature information is deduced from the local Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS), which is measured by scanning the optical frequency of the probe wave.
To achieve high strain/temperature resolution over a wide dynamic range of these two measurands, the scanned frequency range must be wide (>100 MHz) and of high granularity, resulting in a fairly slow procedure, that often requires multiple scanning to reduce noise. Thus, classical BODTA is currently mainly applied to the average or semi-average measurements.
The present invention, in embodiments thereof, provides a method of using stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS), to achieve quasi-simultaneous distributed measurement of dynamic strain along an entire Brillouin-inhomogeneous optical fiber. Following classical mapping of the temporally slowly varying Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS) along the fiber, it will be shown below how to use a specially synthesized and adaptable probe wave to always work on the slope of the local BGS, allowing a single pump pulse to sample fast strain variations along the entire fiber. Strain vibrations on the order of KHz can be simultaneously sampled (i.e., using the same pump pulse) along the entire fiber length, having different average Brillouin shifts.
According to one aspect of the invention, the average characteristics of the fiber under test are first studied along its length. The average characteristics are then used to generate a variable frequency probe signal. The variation in the frequency is tailored based on the studied average characteristics. Additionally, the pump pulse wave and the tailored probe wave are synchronized such that in each specified location along the fiber, the stimulated Brillouin scattering is carried out in optimal conditions, i.e. within the desirable working point. This is achieved due to the match between the average characteristics in a specified location and the frequency of the probe signal in any point the stimulated Brillouin scattering is designed to be carried out.
According to another aspect of the invention, the average characteristics of the fiber under test are not studied prior to the dynamic interrogation of the stimulated Brillouin scattering. Alternatively, a periodic probe wave is generated with a plurality of even length sections, each associated with a different Brillouin shift frequency. The number of the different frequency sections used in the probe wave and their span determine the granularity and range of the strain/temperature that can be measured. The periodic pulse wave is synchronized such that each pump pulse wave meets a different frequency section of the probe wave as it (i.e., the pump wave) propagates along the fiber. For each fiber segment the best fitting probe frequency (in terms of the working point) is chosen, from which the measurement for this segment is taken.
These, additional, and/or other aspects and/or advantages of the embodiments of the present invention are set forth in the detailed description which follows; possibly inferable from the detailed description; and/or learnable by practice of the embodiments of the present invention.
For a better understanding of embodiments of the invention and to show how the same may be carried into effect, reference will now be made, purely by way of example, to the accompanying drawings in which like numerals designate corresponding elements or sections throughout.
In the accompanying drawings:
The present invention, in embodiments thereof, suggests using a probe signal with variable frequency tailored to match average characteristics of an optical fiber under test. Under average strain/temperature conditions, the Brillouin gain spectrum of a uniform fiber is constant along the entire length of the fiber under test. For a given pump frequency, the optical frequency of the counter-propagating probe is then chosen to coincide with one of the −3 dB points of the ˜30 MHz-wide Lorentzian Brillouin gain spectrum. Alternatively, any other point along the slope may be chosen, possibly but not necessarily the center of the slope. It is understood that in the following description, any reference to a −3 dB point should be interpreted as a point along the slope.
In the presence of strain changes, the BGS shifts at approximately 50 MHz/1000 μS, and the fixed frequency probe wave will now experience less or more Brillouin gain, depending of the direction of the BGS shift. Each pump pulse gives rise to a Brillouin-amplified probe signal, whose post processing simultaneously provides the local strain along the entire fiber. Since the probe frequency is not swept, the sampling rate of the strain changes is limited only by the fiber length and the need for averaging. When done digitally, the measurements ends with a two dimensional matrix, where each row represents one time slot containing the probe intensity, resulting from a single pump pulse, and the number of columns is the number of spatial resolution cells along the fiber. Since the fixed probe frequency must remain within the ˜30 MHz wide BGS slope, the dynamic range of this approach is limited to ˜600 με, unless means are taken (e.g., shorter pump pulses) to decrease the BGS slope, at the expense of sensitivity. Normally, though, the center of the BGS varies along the fiber due to either fiber non-uniformity or to the non-uniform average strain/temperature to which the fiber is exposed.
Slow temporal variations of ν3dB(z) can be also tracked effectively by tracking the peak of the BGS by various methods known in the art and used for other applications. An exemplary method would be generating and sensing dithering probe signals with frequencies evenly spaced from the known peak of the BGS.
For practical reasons, embodiments of the present invention provide a method based on the tailoring of the probe frequency to match the average strain/temperature conditions at each spatial segment of fiber 10. For a given pump frequency classical BOTDA is first used to map the peak frequency of the local BGS along the fiber length, from which the distance-dependent probe frequency is obtained, νprobe,3dB(z)=νpump−ν3dB(z), which coincides with one of the −3 dB points on the BGS at distance z (ν3dB(z) is the local Brillouin shift from the pump frequency, νpump, to the probe frequency νprobe,3dB(z)).
generating a periodic variable frequency probe signal, wherein the probe signal exhibits a plurality of temporal sections, each of which is associated with a different frequency selected to cover a dynamic range of respective average characteristic of an optical fiber 410B; injecting the variable frequency probe signal to a first end of the fiber and a periodic pulse signal to a second end of the fiber, such that each fiber section has a best matching probe frequency with which measurement is done 420B; and measuring the matched stimulated Brillouin scattering occurrences to yield data indicative of strain and temperature at various points along the fiber 430B.
The remainder of the description describes an exemplary system configured to implement methods consistent with embodiments of the present invention. It is understood that values and numbers provided herein are for illustrative purposes only and should not be regarded as limiting in scope.
In an experiment carried out, the Applicants have demonstrated the distributed measurement of two concatenated 1 m sections, made of the same fiber, experiencing the same average strain of ˜1000 με, and vibrating at different frequencies of 55 Hz and 470 Hz.
In order to emulate a fiber with a z-dependent Brillouin shift, a fiber comprising five fiber sections was used. The configuration used was the following: The 4 m section and both 12 m sections were loose, while both lm sections could be statically and independently strained to adjust their respective Brillouin shifts. These strained sections were again coupled to the sine-waves-fed audio speakers to induce fast strain variations. Using the classical BOTDA technique with a 15 ns pump pulse, an RF sine wave was scanned at the input of 520A and found the peak of the BGS of the loose sections to be down-shifted from the pump frequency by 10.84 GHz, while the corresponding peaks of the two strained sections were down-shifted by 10.94 GHz and 11 GHz, with their −3 dB points lying at 10.91 GHz and 10.97 GHz, respectively. In order to create the complex, time-dependent probe frequency, a wideband, two-channel arbitrary waveform generator was used, which fed a microwave vector signal generator through the latter I/Q inputs. To apply the suggested method to fiber 10 described above, the I channel of the AWG 514 was programmed to emit an 800 ns sine-wave of 0.04 GHz, immediately followed by an 800 ns, 0.1 GHz sine-wave. With the Q channel comprising the Hilbert transform of the I channel, the frequency of the signal generator was set to 10.87 GHz to generate an RF input to 520A of 800 ns at 10.91 GHz (=10.87+0.04), followed by an 800 ns at 10.97 GHz (=10.87+0.1) burst.
Returning now to the experiment described above,
Other aspects of the invention include constructing several adapted probe waves, each one fits a different point of the distributed BGS. In this case, each pump pulse can interact with a different complex probe wave, enabling the fast interrogation of the BGS distribution along a fiber under test, such as the fiber 10. Thus, instead of working with a single complex probe wave adapted to match only one of the −3 dB point of the distributed BGS (as described above), it is possible to choose, for example, to monitor 3 points on the BGS, for example, two −3 dB points (or center of slope) of the BGS (one on each side), as well as the peak of the BGS. In order to perform such measurements, for example, three different adapted probe waves can be constructed to match the three different BGS pointes. Each pump pulse will meet a different complex probe wave, thereby fitting one of the aforementioned three points. Eventually, in such an implementation, the entire length of the fiber 10 can be interrogated at the three BGS points in a relatively very short time during every three sequential pump pulses. Utilizing the present technique, a fast tracking of the varying distributed BGS along the fiber can be achieved.
While the invention has been described with respect to a limited number of embodiments, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention, but rather as exemplifications of some of the preferred embodiments. Other possible variations, modifications, and applications are also within the scope of the invention.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB12/50362 | 1/26/2012 | WO | 00 | 7/25/2013 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61436661 | Jan 2011 | US |