The present invention is generally related to seismic sensors, and more particularly to fiber optic seismic sensor systems. As used throughout this application and its appended claims, seismic movement and activity can mean any vibrations capable of measurement by a land-based sensor, whether caused by geologic activity, other natural phenomena, explosions, the motion or effects of mechanical implements or any other activity causing vibrations in a land mass.
The traditional method for detecting seismic signals has been the coil-type geophone. Geophone sensors comprise a mass-spring assembly contained in a cartridge about 3 cm long and weighing about 75 grams. In a typical geophone sensor, the spring is soft and as the cartridge case moves the mass (coil) is held in place by its own inertia. Thus, the coil acts as a reference for measurement of the cartridge displacement. This sensor arrangement is used for measurement of large, oscillatory displacements on the order of millimeters with sub-micrometer resolution. The frequency range of these sensors is limited, however. For best sensitivity to small displacements, a given sensor has a mechanical bandwidth of about 10 Hz. Sensors can be designed with center frequencies from 20 Hz to 100 Hz.
Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems (MEMS) are miniature mechanical components fabricated in silicon wafers. The fabrication methods are based on the same photolithographic and etching processes used to manufacture electronic circuits in silicon. In fact, most MEMS devices include not only miniature mechanical components such as beams, nozzles, gears, etc. but also, integrated electronic components to provide local signal conditioning. Unfortunately, the integrated circuits limit the maximum operating temperature of electronic MEMS to 75° C. The maximum temperature limit can be extended to 400° C. or more if optical fiber sensors are integrated with mechanical MEMS components so that no electronics are needed in the high temperature environment.
Recently, MEMS accelerometers have been developed for 3-component (3C) land seismic measurements. In the MEMS accelerometer, a mass-spring assembly is also used, but unlike the geophone, the spring is stiff and the mass moves with the case that houses the MEMS. The inertia of the mass causes strain and deflection of the spring and the deflection or strain can be measured with a sensor to determine the acceleration. High performance 3C MEMS accelerometers with capacitance sensors have been demonstrated.
The measurement range of accelerometers is specified in units of ‘G’ where 1G=9.8 m/s2. Commercial specifications include 120 dBV dynamic range (1G to 10−6 G) and 500 Hz mechanical bandwidth with 24-bit digital resolution equivalent to a noise limited performance of 10−7G/(Hz)1/2. The accelerometer is fabricated on a silicon chip on the order of 100 mm2 and weighing roughly 1 gram. Three single-axis accelerometers (each with an application specific integrated circuit (ASIC) on each chip for signal conditioning) are packaged to measure in three orthogonal directions. The limitation of these accelerometers is an upper limit on the operating temperature of 75° C., which is imposed by the electronic integrated circuits and is not a fundamental limitation of silicon itself.
Additional objects and advantages are set forth in the description which follows, as well as other that may be obvious from the description, known to those skilled in the art or may be learned by practice of the invention.
Exemplary objects and advantages, taken together with the operation of at least one embodiment, may be better understood by reference to the following detailed description taken in connection with the following illustrations, wherein:
a is a top-view diagrammatical representation of a MEMS cantilever which can be integrated within a silicon wafer, a frame or a combination thereof;
b is a partial side-view representation of the interface between the MEMS cantilever and the optical fiber;
While the present invention is described with reference to the preferred embodiment, it should be clear that the present invention should not be limited to this embodiment. Therefore, the description of the preferred embodiment herein is illustrative of the present invention and should not limit the scope of the invention as claimed.
Reference will now be made in detail to a preferred embodiment illustrated in the accompanying drawings, which illustrate an accelerometer/sensor design and overall system architecture.
The design of the sensor is based on integration of a interferometric fiber optic sensor with a MEMS accelerometer structure. Table 1 below summarizes typical design specifications for an interferometer integrated with MEMS accelerometer. Notably, a Fabry-Perot, two beam or other multiple beam type interferometer can be used in accordance with the invention described herein.
To accommodate the need for an accelerometer with a maximum sensitivity that has a nominal resonant frequency of 100 Hz, two MEMS units can be used on each axis in order to cover a wider G range as well as the mechanical bandwidth requirements, although both the number of units in each axis as well as the number of axes can be altered to suit the desired sensitivity of sensor. Assuming the displacement range for each accelerometer is 1 nm to 1000 nm, the performance characteristics for each MEMS are given in Table 2.
A diagram of the MEMS cantilever is shown in
With reference to
Understanding that the cantilever 10 will be mechanically coupled to the MEMS unit which houses the interferometer, the position of the fiber 12 relative to the cantilever 10 (that itself defines the gap distance g) should be selected so as to maximize sensitivity to vibrations of the cantilever 10. For the ease of construction and stability during operation, it may be preferable to etch the cantilever onto a planar wafer such that the “leg” portions (shown in
Table 3 lists the MEMS dimensions when the cantilevers have a preferred uniform thickness of 25 μm. Note that the information below corresponds to the reference lines indicated in
A preferred optoelectronic signal processor schematic for the invention is shown in
The signal processor is designed to read out the gap from an interferometric sensor, such as a Fabry-Perot, two-beam or other multiple beam interferometric sensor, that has a nominal 150 μm long gap. Larger or smaller gaps are possible through appropriate modifications. As shown in
In operation, the difference in thickness of the cross correlators A, B varies to match the sensor 24. When the cross correlators are properly adjusted, the thickness directly in front of the detectors is approximately equal to the gap monitored by sensor 24 so that the difference between the cross correlator thicknesses is approximately λ/8, where λ is the center wavelength of the light source emission. As indicated by the sine curves in
The detectors are InGaAs photodiodes to match the light sources. For long-range applications, i.e., where the light passing through the processor 20 traverses more than 1000 meters, sources in the C-band (1500 to 1600 nm) are needed where optical fiber losses are low. The source may be either and LED or ASE, although adjustments to account for such loses may allow the use of other sources. The output of one of the photodiode detectors, i.e., photodiode D1, is designated the measurement signal and the other photodiode output, i.e., photodiode D2, is designated the tracking signal. The measurement signal proportional to the gap in sensor 24 is amplified in the signal processor and this amplified signal is the processor analog output. The tracking signal is used to control the actuator to maintain the measurement signal on the point of maximum slope of one of the interference fringes shown in
The actuators in cross correlators A, B may be stepper motors or other suitable actuators such as lead-zirconate-titanate PZT crystals that change the gaps of the two cross correlators A and B through a relatively large range, e.g., 20 μm. The separation of the cross correlator gaps A and B is set so that the modulated signal shown in
The LED or ASE sources may be selected to have center wavelengths at 1520 nm and 1580 nm to cover the entire band 1500 nm to 1600 nm. With high brightness sources, the average spectral power per unit wavelength interval is greater than 5 μW/nm, which is sufficient for the application. Such an ASE or LED pair can excite 24 MEMS units, although other possible sources (with differing brightness and wavelengths) may be possible.
In terms of the overall layout of the sensor system, twelve ASE or LED pairs and twelve optical fibers are required to monitor 144 MEMS units which, keeping in mind more than one MEMS may be needed in each of three axes, would be necessary to achieve a preferred sensitivity for the system. A cable to service 144 MEMS units would contain 12 optical fibers. A thirteenth fiber may be provided to service 24 temperature sensors to monitor the thermal environment of the accelerometers and cable. Notably, such temperature sensors can be implemented to improve the overall performance of the system. So as to be compatible with the preferred light sources identified above, all optical fibers may be single mode in the C-band (for example, core diameter 9 μm and clad diameter 125 μm), although other appropriate types may be used.
A diagram of one possible embodiment for the overall system architecture is shown in
A measurement station is defined as a location where a three-axis vibration measurement is to be performed, thereby requiring cantilever/sensor combinations in each of these axes. Thus, to illustrate according to the principles set forth in the preferred embodiment above, a pair of fibers and two LEDs can service 24 MEMS units, and there would be six MEMS units per station. Twenty-four stations require 144 MEMS units. Wavelengths labeled λ1, λ2, and λ3 represent wavelength bands 3-4 nm wide. Thus, 24 MEMS span 96 nm that is approximately equal to the wavelength band 1500-1600 nm of the two combined LEDs.
The output of the two detectors D1, D2 is a pair of phase shifted signals (e.g., quadrature signals 90° out of phase or other suitable signal pairs). As explained earlier, the signals are electronically demodulated to obtain the time varying signal from each MEMS accelerometer. The time varying signals may in turn be sent to a spectrum analyzer to record frequency and amplitude information over the 500 Hz spectral range of each MEMS accelerometer unit.
The embodiment above provides integration of a silicon MEMS cantilever beam accelerometer with an interferometric fiber optic sensor with sufficient sensitivity and range for use in land seismic applications. Further, the maximum temperature limit of the accelerometers is 400° C. or more since optical fiber is integrated with mechanical MEMS components. Finally, no electronics are needed in the high temperature environment.
Alternative embodiments for the optoelectronic signal processor to those shown in
While the embodiments described herein and the invention identified should find particular applicability in detecting seismic movements as defined above, the apparatus and method can be used to detect changes to any number of environmental parameters which create small movements or vibrations. By way of example rather than limitation, the sensor and method described herein could be used to detect changes in pressure, temperature and the like.
This application claims priority from U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 60/637,966, filed Dec. 21, 2004.
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