The present invention relates to a Fabry-Perot fiber optic sensor and, more particularly, to a high finesse Fabry-Perot sensor and tunable laser combination system for measuring small displacements.
Low finesse Fabry-Perot interferometers have a reflectivity of approx. 50% or less. Such interferometers have been used in sensors in order to provide an indication as to the displacement of a gap between two reflective surfaces. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,276,501 to McClintock et al. describes a low-finesse Fabry-Perot fiber optic sensor that uses a laser of limited tuning range. The laser itself is tuned via temperature control to operate at two different wavelengths. Notably, reflectivity of the sensor is in the range of 4%, and the readout from the sensor is approximated as a two beam interferometer so that the gap length is a function of wavelength difference and the interference from the additional multiple reflected beams is neglected. While this type of two-beam interferometer approximation may serve the purposes of the McClintock patent, the inventors have accounted for the fact that interference patterns from Fabry-Perot interferometers are not periodic. Consequently, the teachings of the McClintock patent do not apply to Fabry-Perot sensors in the art, especially with respect to the methodology used to perform the calculation of gap length.
Notably, both with respect to the McClintock patent and the other prior references known to the inventors, the range of gaps measurable by prior art laser-based Fabry-Perot sensors were limited in practice by the wavelength and tuning range of the laser. Other errors in such systems resulted from laser instabilities and inability to precisely measure and control laser wavelength.
Given the above limitations and shortcomings of the prior art, a system that is capable of measuring absolute values and monitor small changes in gaps in real time (i.e., at fast scan rates exceeding 2 Hz) would be welcome by the industry. Moreover, a high-finesse system to enable accurate calculations according to true Fabry-Perot equations is needed.
The present invention addresses the aforementioned needs within the industry by providing an accurate system using a tunable laser light source and a Fabry-Perot sensor configured as a transducer. The Fabry-Perot sensor receives and modulates the laser light, and the light is tunable over a range of frequencies. The modulated light is then detected via an InGaAs element (or similar detector means sensitive to the selected wavelengths of the laser). The detector generates a signal based upon the intensity ratio of the modulated laser light, and the detector signal is fed to the signal conditioner. To insure accuracy, the temperature of the Fabry-Perot sensor in the pressure transducer may be monitored with a second Fabry-Perot temperature sensor. The detector signal, and optionally the temperature signal, are provided to a signal conditioner, which identifies two frequency minima in the intensity ratio and generates an output indicative of displacement between the reflective surfaces of the transducer. Preferably, the frequency range of the tunable laser is between 187.5 THz and 200 THz (or 1500 to 1600 nm in wavelength).
A method for monitoring and quantitatively measuring small displacements in a Fabry-Perot sensor is also contemplated. The method includes interrogating the reflective surfaces bounding a variable unknown gap in the Fabry-Perot sensor using a frequency-tunable laser light. The laser light is provided over a range of frequencies, and the intensity of the laser light modulated by the Fabry-Perot sensor is monitored to identify at least two minima. An absolute value of the distance of the unknown gap can then be calculated from these minima. In turn, the absolute value for the unknown variable gap may be used to calculate and monitor an environmental parameter of the Fabry-Perot sensor—most likely the pressure applied to one of the reflective surfaces in the sensors. Optional temperature correction and/or laser pulsing can be performed to enhance the performance of the system. Additional interrogation of the sensor over a reduced range of laser frequencies for fast scan monitoring of the variable gap is also contemplated.
This invention is a new approach for using fiber optic Fabry-Perot sensors to make high-resolution temperature and pressure measurements at long distances between the sensor and the signal conditioning system. The approach requires a high power, tunable laser that can provide rapid switching in fine increments in narrow wavelength bands with repeatability in the infrared spectral band from 1500 to 1600 nm. Such tunable lasers with very wide tuning range have recently become commercially available. By operating in the 1500 to 1600 nm spectral band where attenuation in optical fiber is very low, high resolution pressure and temperature measurements can be made using Fabry-Perot sensors at remote distances in excess of 10000 meters with update rates of 10 Hz.
A schematic of the invention 10 is shown in
By way of example, the Fabry-Perot pressure sensor Sp is shown in
Infrared light reflected from the F-P cavity and gap G returns to the signal conditioner (see
d=0.2(Pr4)/(Et3) (1)
where r is the diaphragm radius
For a typical working design
The maximum stress S is given by
The infrared light intensity reflected back to the signal conditioner from the F-P cavity is modulated as the diaphragm deflects and the gap G changes. The ratio of the incident-to-reflected intensity IR is a function of both the laser frequency and the gap G and is given by
where c=λν is the velocity of light
For illustration purposes in the remaining
Significantly, the inventors were the first to identify and exploit this variation in the intensity ratio versus frequency, as described in Equation 3. Previous methods had presumed this dependence was repetitive. Consequently, these previous methods could not achieve the level of precision for absolute, quantitative measurements attained by the present invention. Moreover, these previous systems could not achieve the fast scan monitoring performed by the present invention.
To maximize the resolution of the system, it is important to match the range of gaps with the tuning range of the laser. For example, given a laser with a tuning range of 20 nm, and a transducer with starting gap at 0 psi pressure of 80 μm, then at 20000 psi pressure, the transducer should be designed to deflect 20 μm and the deflection range is 80 μm to 60 μm. It is necessary that for all gaps in the range 60 to 80 μm, there must be at least two minima in the F-P modulated spectrum (see
Note that the radius and thickness of the diaphragm 16 (as illustrated in the example above, a flat Inconel-718) can be chosen so that at pre-determined deflection distance (and its resulting the maximum stress, S) will be well below the yield strength of the material. Selection of a low stress is also significant because it provides a very repeatable pressure sensor with little or no hysteresis. As used here, hysteresis refers to the graph of sensor gap versus pressure. If hysteresis is present, the gap will follow two different paths—one path when the pressure increases and a different path when the pressure decreases.
An additional source of non-repeatability occurs when the stress in the diaphragm approaches the yield point of the material. When this occurs, the sensor will not produce repeatable results and will need recalibration. Thus, it is desirable to design the transducer SPD so that the stress never approaches the yield point and for this reason, alternate transducer designs would be of great value.
An alternate for sensor SP is shown as sensor SPS in
In the example shown with a tunable laser that operates over the wavelength range 1500 to 1600 nm (which corresponds to a frequency range of 200 THz to 187.5 THz, respectively speaking), it is necessary to design both the pressure and temperature sensors so the minimum gap is approximately 60 um. For all gaps in the range, there must be at least two minima in the F-P modulated spectrum (see
Consider the well-known relationship for a Fabry-Perot (reference Born and Wolf, Principles of Optics) with mirror separation G
Δν=c/2G (4)
where ν is the optical frequency at wavelength λ and the velocity of light c=λν. The symbol Δ signifies a small change in the frequency ν, where Δν=ν2−ν1. It follows from the velocity of light that
Δν/ν=−Δλ/λ (5)
where ν is the light frequency and λ the wavelength. The minus sign simply means that as the frequency increases the wavelength decreases. Consider a laser with an operating frequency between 192.3 THz (λ=1560 nm) and 197.5 THz (λ=1519 nm). The laser frequency is tunable with tuning range Δν=5.2×1012 Hz. Note that 1 THz=1012 Hz. The laser is tuned in a step-wise manner and covers the range in 40000 steps where each step is given by the resolution element δ=1.3×108 Hz. The symbol δ signifies a much smaller change than the symbol Δ, but the expression in Equation 5 continues to hold. δλ, the resolution element in wavelength is calculated as
Equation 4 defines the spacing between the minima or spacing between the maxima plotted in
As long as there are at least two minima in the intensity ratio that are observed when the laser is tuned over its range, it is always possible to measure the gap G uniquely. A calibration plot of sensor gap versus Δν is shown in
The smallest change in the gap that can be measured is determined from Equations 4 and 5. Consider the last case in Table 1 where G=60241 nm and ν2=195.99 THz. Calculate δG corresponding to the resolution element δν=1.3×108 Hz
For a pressure range of 20000 psi and a diaphragm deflection range of 20000 nm (gap range 80 μm to 60 μm), a deflection resolution of 0.04 nm equates to a pressure resolution of 0.04 psi.
The following specifications are acceptable for the tunable laser of the present invention: tunable laser scans 40,000 steps in 10 sec (and can also scan 400 steps in 0.1 sec); operating scan range is 192.3 THz to 197.5 THz in Laser 1; operating scan range is 186.8 THz to 192 THz in Laser 2; step size is 1 pm/step in wavelength space or 130 MHz/step in frequency space (c=λν, where c is velocity of light, λ is laser wavelength and ν is laser frequency). Additionally, Sensor gap (G) range is 60000 nm to 80000 nm, and the corresponding pressure range is 20000 psi to 0 psi. A dither operation enables tracking of a minimum in the intensity ratio.
An algorithm that details a step-by-step method to determine the size of gap G, and thus the applied pressure (or some other environmental parameter associated with the Fabry-Perot sensor SP), using the tunable laser L is as follows:
In summary, the sensor interrogation system consists of a tunable laser that can provide 40,000 separate and adjacent frequency outputs over the band 192.3 THz to 197.5 THz and a photodiode to measure the light intensity reflected from the Fabry-Perot gap in a pressure sensor. The system can provide pressure measurement accuracy less than 0.1 psi. A second Fabry-Perot temperature sensor SPT may also be provided as shown in
In long distance applications, the sensor may be 5 km, 10 km or 15 km away from the signal conditioner. To ensure that light from the tunable laser reaches the sensor at the end of such long optical fiber cables, high output power is needed. An output power of 1 mW is sufficient and 10 mW is typically available from tunable laser systems. Such large power presents a fundamental problem however. When so much power is injected into the transmission fiber, light is scattered back to the detector. Although the percentage of light scattered back is small, the laser power is large, so that over the first 10 meters or so of fiber length, the amount of light back-scattered causes significant detector noise. An optical time domain reflectometer (OTDR) experiences the same problem, which is why there is a dead band for the first few meters when using an OTDR. The large scattered light signal saturates the detector. One method to minimize or reduce the effect is to pulse the light source.
Light travels about 5 ns/m in optical fiber with refractive index n=1.45. Thus it takes light about 25 μs to travel 5 km, 50 μs to travel 10 km, and 75 μs to travel 15 km. If the laser is turned on and off, then for example, if the range is 10 km, the laser can be turned on for 50 μs and off for 50 μs. The detector can be synchronized with the laser so that when the laser is on the detector is off and when the laser is off the detector is on. For the 50 μs when the laser is on the light travels to the sensor and the detector sees no noise since it is off. For the second 50 μs, the laser is off and the detector sees infrared light reflected from the sensor. With continuous operation in this mode, the laser light is on half the time and off half the time (50% duty cycle) and the detector noise is minimized because it is not exposed to scattered light. If the laser and detector on-time and off-time are continuously adjustable from 25 to 75 μs, then it is possible to adjust for any sensor range between 5 and 15 km.
Numerous methods are available to turn the detector on and off. These include a fast shutter, electro-optic modulator, or a simple electronic circuit to switch on and off the electric current to the laser.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Ser. No. 60/562,430, filed Apr. 15, 2004.
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