Claims
- 1. A fiber-optic sensor system comprising:a first sensor grating and a second sensor grating; a first optical splitter and a second optical splitter, each said splitter having a source port, a filter port, and a sensor port, wherein optical energy applied to said sensor port is divided between said source port and said filter port, and wherein optical energy applied to said source port travels to said sensor port, said first optical splitter sensor port coupled to said first sensor grating, and said second optical splitter sensor port coupled to said second sensor grating; a third splitter having an input and a first and second output wherein optical energy applied to said input divides equally between said first output and said second output; a fourth splitter having an input and a first and second output wherein optical energy applied to said input divides equally between said first output and said second output; a coarse wavelength discriminator having a first and a second input, and a first and a second output, said first coarse wavelength discriminator input coupled to said first output of said third splitter, said coarse wavelength discriminator second input coupled to said fourth splitter first output; a fine wavelength discriminator having a first and a second input, and a first and a second output, said first fine wavelength discriminator input coupled to said second output of said third splitter, said fine wavelength discriminator second input coupled to said fourth splitter second output; a first coarse detector converting an optical input to an electrical response, said optical input coupled to said first coarse wavelength discriminator output; a second coarse detector converting an optical input to an electrical response, said optical input coupled to said second coarse discriminator output; a first fine detector converting an optical input to an electrical response, said optical input coupled to said first fine wavelength discrimintator output; a second fine detector converting an optical input to an electrical response, said optical input coupled to said second fine discriminator output; wherein optical energy present in said coarse wavelength discriminator first or second input produces said first detector and said second detector responses which vary monotonically from a first discriminator wavelength to a final discriminator wavelength, said monotonic relationship between said detector response and a wavelength stored in said controller; said first optical source and said second optical source each said source having an enable input and producing an optical output when said enable input is active, said first optical source output coupled to said first splitter source port, and said second optical source output coupled to said second splitter source port; a controller having a first enable output coupled to said first optical source, a second enable output coupled to said second optical source, a first coarse input coupled to said first coarse detector, and a second coarse input coupled to said second coarse detector, a first fine input coupled to said first fine detector, and a second fine input coupled to said second fine detector, said controller producing said first enable output and said second enable output during mutually exclusive time intervals, and recording said coarse detector responses and said fine detector responses.
- 2. The sensor of claim 1 wherein said controller determines the wavelength of said first sensor or said second sensor by comparing said coarse first detector response and said coarse detector second response to a stored copy of said coarse wavelength discriminator and said fine wavelength discriminator characteristic.
- 3. The sensor of claim 2 wherein said comparison uses a normalized power ratio formed from the ratio of the difference of said first coarse detector output and said second coarse detector output divided by the sum of said first coarse detector output and said second coarse detector output.
- 4. The sensor of claim 3 wherein the relationship between said normalized power ratio and wavelength is stored in a look-up table.
- 5. The sensor of claim 3 wherein said the relationship between said normalized power ratio and wavelength is stored in the form of the coefficients of a power series.
- 6. The sensor of claim 2 wherein said normalized power ratio is modified by the measurement of said first fine detector response and said second fine detector response.
- 7. The sensor of claim 6 wherein said modification of said normalized power ratio using said fine detector response is stored in a look-up table.
- 8. The sensor of claim 6 wherein said modification of said normalized power ratio using said fine detector response is stored in the form of the coefficients of a power series.
- 9. The sensor of claim 7 or 8 wherein said first sensor or said second sensor measures temperature.
- 10. The sensor of claim 7 or 8 wherein said first sensor or said second sensor measures strain.
- 11. The sensor of claim 7 or 8 wherein said first optical source and said second optical source are modulated in frequency or amplitude by a modulation function, and said coarse detector outputs and said fine detector outputs are formed by demodulation of said detector input signal.
Parent Case Info
This is a divisional fapplication Ser. No. 09/286,092 filed on Apr. 2, 1999 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,597,822.
Government Interests
This invention was made with U.S. Government support under grant NAS 1-20579 awarded by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. The U.S. Government has certain rights in this invention. The current invention applies to the field of fiber-optic sensors, wherein a dimensional change in a fiber having a Bragg grating is detected using a measurement system comprising broad-band sources, optical power splitters, a high-sensitivity wavelength discriminator, optical detectors, and a controller.
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