Conventional active source absorption spectroscopy systems for analyzing gases, such as CO2, CH4, O2, etc. implement collocated transmitter and receiver components and, as such, require a short path length or reflections to return transmitted signals to the source location. Over long distances, the transmitted signals are reflected off minors or the ground to effect the return of the signal to the collocated receiver. Scattered returns from aerosol constituents or particles in these systems give rise to an additive error from backscattered radiation. This error effectively reduces the measured absorption, since the backscattered return completes only a partial path through the medium being analyzed. Additionally, if the reflector used is diffuse, large range-squared losses in the system result, prohibiting long-range implementation of the overall system.
In light of the shortcomings of these and other techniques, the need has been felt for a technique to measure constituents in a medium or the atmosphere so that partial path scattered return is ignored and to reduce transmission power losses where only diffuse targets exist for reflecting transmitted radiation.
Described herein is a technique applicable to remote absorption spectroscopy using spatially isolated and arbitrarily located transmitter and receiver subsystems. Multispectral electromagnetic radiation may be generated to have spectral content coinciding with both an absorption band of a medium and an off-line band. The radiation may be modified prior to transmission, such as by a set of codes, to define a relationship between at least one spectral component in the absorption band and at least one spectral component in the off-line band. This relationship is controlled to be temporally constant and is known at the receiver. The receiver accepts the transmitted radiation through line-of-sight propagation through the medium and the spectral content of the received radiation is analyzed. Deviation of the spectral content of the received radiation from the relationship defined by the transmitter may be attributable to absorption by the medium of the spectral component inside the absorption.
The above and still further features and advantages of the present inventive concept will become apparent upon consideration of the following definitions, descriptions and descriptive figures of specific embodiments thereof. While these descriptions go into specific details of certain embodiments of the inventive concept, it is to be understood that variations may and do exist and will be apparent to those skilled in the art upon review of this disclosure.
The present inventive concept is best described through certain embodiments thereof, which are described in detail herein with reference to the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals refer to like features throughout. It is to be understood that the term invention, when used herein, is intended to connote the inventive concept underlying the embodiments described below and not merely the embodiments themselves. It is to be understood further that the general inventive concept is not limited to the illustrative embodiments described below and the following descriptions should be read in such light.
Additionally, mathematical expressions may be contained herein and those principles conveyed thereby are to be taken as being thoroughly described therewith. It is to be understood that where mathematics are used, such is for succinct description of the underlying principles being explained and, unless otherwise expressed, no other purpose is implied or should be inferred. It will be clear from this disclosure overall how the mathematics herein pertain to the present invention and, where embodiment of the principles underlying the mathematical expressions is intended, the ordinarily skilled artisan will recognize numerous techniques to carry out physical manifestations of the principles being mathematically expressed.
In
Transmitter 110 may define and control a relationship between certain spectral components of beam 125, and provide knowledge of such relationship to receiver 130. As used herein, the term spectral component refers to a constituent spectral element of electromagnetic radiation and the term spectral content refers to the spectral makeup of the radiation over a predetermined range thereof. Thus, spectral components are distributed over the spectrum of the radiation to comprise the spectral content thereof. Receiver 130 may analyze the received spectral components of beam 125 and resolve absorption properties of medium 120 from the knowledge of the transmitted spectrum. Receiver 130 may make certain corrections to compensate for the system configuration and path-dependent variables caused by such configuration.
RAS 100 may be deployed in medium 120 that is substantially unbounded, such as the atmosphere and, as illustrated in
Transmitter 110 and receiver 130 may be arbitrarily locatable such that the path length D through medium 120 can be varied on a deployment basis. Distance D between transmitter 110 and receiver 130 may be limited by system configuration, e.g., transmitter power and receiver sensitivity, but the present invention may be embodied for distances ranging from a few meters to hundreds of kilometers, as will be appreciated by the ordinarily skilled artisan upon review of this disclosure.
In
In the exemplary embodiment illustrated in
Exemplary transmitter 210 includes a controller 218, through which the spectral content of transmitted beam 240′ is established and controlled. Beam 240 includes, for example, spectral components CA(λABS), referred to herein as components 242, and spectral components CB(λREF), referred to herein as components 244, where CA(•) and CB(•) are modulation coding functions on electromagnetic radiation having wavelengths λABS and λREF, respectively. It is to be understood that the notation CX(λX) carries with it the implication of an electromagnetic spectrum containing spectral components λX generated by radiation sources, such as lasers, and spectral components generated by the application of coding function CX(•) on λX, such as through modulation.
Wavelength λABS may be chosen to coincide with an absorption band of a chemical constituent of the medium under study and λREF may be chosen to lie in an off-line band for purposes of reference. As used herein, an off-line band is a band in the electromagnetic spectrum of beam 240 that excludes λABS. In certain embodiments, λREF is chosen to lie in a spectral region where absorption is less than that at λABS.
Coding functions CA(•) and CB(•) may be chosen to differentiate spectral components 242, 244 at receiver 260 and may be chosen to take on temporally-variable states, such as in amplitude, phase, etc., so that spectral properties of beam 240 can be controlled per a prescribed criterion. For example, CA(•) and CB(•) may be independent amplitude modulation functions of different modulation frequencies that can identify respective components 242, 244. The amplitudes of the modulation functions can be independently varied to control spectral energy in each of the transmitted components 242, 244, denoted herein as P(λABS) and P(λREF). For example, the modulation amplitudes may be controlled so that P(λABS) and P(λREF) are relatively maintained in accordance with a prescribed relationship, which may be, for example, proportionality. At receiver 260, under the assumption that the relationship between P(λABS) and P(λREF) is constant at transmitter 210, variations in that relationship at receiver 260 can be attributed with confidence to absorption by the medium. The ordinarily skilled artisan may recognize other coding schemes that may be used in conjunction with the present invention without departing from the spirit and intended scope thereof. The scope of the present invention is intended to embrace such alternative schemes.
The application of CA(•) and CB(•) on λABS and λREF may redistribute the energy of the spectral content of beam 240. Such redistribution may be over a very large spectral range. For example, to measure absorption of CO2, λABS may be 1.5711194 microns and λREF may be 1.57116194 microns. CA(•) may be sinusoidal amplitude modulation at, say, 50 kHz and CB(•) may be sinusoidal amplitude modulation at, say, 53 kHz. When CA(•) is applied to λABS, some of the energy originally at 1.5711194 microns is redistributed to 6.0 km. Similarly, the application of CB(•) to λREF redistributes some of the energy originally at 1.57116194 microns to 5.7 km. Receiver 260 may be configured to reject radiation outside, say, the micron range and, as such, would certainly not detect changes in energy levels in the kilometer range. However, changes in energy levels in the band containing 1.5711194-1.57116194 microns may be detectable at receiver 260 and, as such, the 50 and 53 kHz modulation may be used to control detectable levels of energy contained at those wavelengths. This control may be leveraged by embodiments of the present invention to maintain a relationship between λABS and λREF at transmitter 210 and to detect changes in that relationship at receiver 260.
As illustrated in
Exemplary receiver 260 includes a collector 250 through which received beam 240″ is accepted and provided to a detector 262. Collector 250 may include focusing elements by which beam 240″ is focused onto an active area of detector 262, in response to which one or more electrical signals 263 may be generated. Electrical signal 263 may represent the spectral content of the received beam 240″, i.e., the spectral content of beam 240 as transformed by the medium through which it has travelled. Electrical signal 263 may be provided to an analyzer 264, which may perform suitable spectral analyses on the received beam 240″ to determine whether a deviation in the spectral content thereof is carried in the relationship between spectral components 242, 244 of the transmitted beam 240′. If so, as discussed above, the deviation may be reported as due to absorption of one or more of those spectral components by the medium.
Transmitter 210 and receiver 260 may be located along a line-of-sight path so that beam 240 can pass unidirectionally through the medium under scrutiny. That is, transmitter 210 and receiver 260 may be positioned in space such that scattered radiation from beam 240 in other than the forward direction from transmitter 210 is isolated from detector 262. Thus, absorption measurements by RAS 200 are free from noise contamination caused by backscattering, as is the case with conventional atmospheric absorption spectrometers.
Radiation sources 310, 320 may be implemented by respective lasers emitting coherent light at wavelengths λABS and λREF, referred to herein as laser light 311 and laser light 321, respectively. Laser light 311, 321 may be modulated by optical modulators 312, 322 in accordance with selected codes. Optical modulators 312, 322 may be electro-optical devices independently operated at modulation frequencies suitable to apply the respective codes on laser light 311, 321. The modulated laser light 313, 323 may be sampled through the use of beamsplitters 314, 324, as will be described below, and provided to collimators 316, 326. Collimators 316, 326 may be implemented by suitable beam expanders through which the modulated light 313, 323 emerges from aperture 370 as a beam 380. It is to be understood that while, in certain embodiments, components 382, 384 may emerge from transmitter 303 in separate beams, such separated beams will be referred to herein as if such were contained in a single beam 380 for purposes of description and not limitation. It is to be understood further that, while separate collimators 316, 326 are illustrated in
Exemplary transmitter 303 includes a control channel 306, by which the spectral content of optical channels 302, 304 is established and controlled. Control channel 306 may be implemented through suitable hardware, firmware and/or programmable processing hardware executing software, and may be constructed through analog and/or digital hardware. The ordinarily skilled artisan will readily recognize numerous control schemes by which control channel 306 can be embodied upon review of this disclosure. The scope of the present invention is intended to embrace all such embodiments of control channel 306.
Exemplary control channel 306 includes an encoder 340 to generate modulation codes in accordance with an electrical signal 332 provided thereto. RAS 300 is not limited to particular modulation codes; the codes can be chosen on an application basis in consideration of, for example, modulation and detection capabilities of the system components of RAS 300. Encoder 340 may generate electrical signals 342, 344 by which modulators 312, 322 are independently operated to apply the modulation codes on each optical channel 302, 304. Encoder 340 may generate, for example, amplitude modulation codes that are fixed in frequency. Control signal 332 may indicate to encoder 340 amplitude levels of respective codes applied to channels 302, 304 so that the relationship between spectral components 382, 384 is maintained. In certain embodiments, the relationship is a predetermined ratio between the transmitted optical energy in components 382 and that of components 384. When so embodied, exemplary encoder 340 modifies the amplitude of one or both codes in each optical channel 302, 304 so as to maintain the transmitted energy ratio. Electrical signals 342, 344 may be provided to modulators 312, 322, whereby modulated laser light 313, 323 is produced in each channel 302, 304.
Modulated light 313, 323 may be sampled, such as through beamsplitters 314, 324 and optical detector 350 for purposes of monitoring and control of the relationship between spectral components 382, 384. Optical detector 350 may be a monolithic optical device having a single active area sufficient in dimension to receive sampled beams 315, 325. In certain embodiments, focusing optics (not illustrated) may be inserted into the path between sampled beams 315, 325 and the active area of detector 350. Optical detector 350 should have sufficient dynamic range so as to respond to changes in the spectral range encompassing λABS and λREF as modulation in each optical channel 302, 304 varies.
Detector 350 may generate an electrical signal 352 representative of changing spectral conditions in beam 380, which may be provided to a discriminator 360. Discriminator may, in turn, generate electrical signals 334, 336 indicative of the changing spectral conditions in each channel 302, 304, which may be provided to controller 330. Exemplary discriminator 362 includes correlators 362, 364, each configured in accordance with the modulation code of a corresponding optical channel 302, 304. Such correlators 362, 364 may be implemented through matched filters tuned to the modulation code in the corresponding optical channel 302, 304. When so embodied, the output of each correlator 362, 364 is a time-varying electrical signal 334, 336 indicative of the spectral energy transmitted in components 382, 384, which is proportional to the energy transmitted at wavelengths λABS and λREF, respectively.
Exemplary controller 330 is provided with signals 334, 336, whereby the relationship between transmitted energy in each channel 302, 304 is monitored and controlled. For example, if the prescribed relationship is P(λABS)=r0·P(λREF), where P(X) is the power measured at detector 350 for channel X and extracted by discriminator 360, controller 330 may evaluate P(λABS)/P(λREF) from signals 334, 336 to determine a deviation Δr of the evaluated ratio from the prescribed ratio r0, e.g., Δr=(r−r0), where r is the ratio computed from signals 334, 336. A non-zero deviation Δr may be reflected in control signal 332, responsive to which encoder 340 makes suitable adjustments to signals 342, 344 to increase and/or decrease P(λABS) and/or P(λREF) in one or both of modulated light beams 313, 323.
Exemplary absorption processor 395 determines absorption in the medium at λABS from an evaluation of reval/r0. As discussed, RAS 300 is embodied to precisely govern the spectral content of beam 380 so that λABS lies in the absorption band of interest, λREF is outside the absorption band of interest and the transmitted ratio P(λABS)/P(λREF) is maintained at r0. Accordingly, absent any absorption at λABS by the medium, reval/r0 is substantially unity. Deviations from unity in the evaluation of reval/r0 can be attributed, with a reasonable degree of confidence, to absorption of the medium at λABS. Absorption processor 395 may apply correction measures on reval/r0 to account for, among other things, length of the transmission path, the direction of beam 380 through the medium, beam dispersion, the number of receivers and the manner in which the transmitted radiation is accepted thereby, e.g., simultaneous reception, temporally sequential, etc. An indication of compensated reval/r0 may be conveyed in a signal 396 to a reporter 397, which may format results of the analysis by absorption processor 460 in a manner perceivable by a human user.
It is to be understood that the separation of functionality of components illustrated in
The descriptions above are intended to illustrate possible implementations of the present inventive concept and are not restrictive. Many variations, modifications and alternatives will become apparent to the skilled artisan upon review of this disclosure. For example, components equivalent to those shown and described may be substituted therefore, elements and methods individually described may be combined, and elements described as discrete may be distributed across many components. The scope of the invention should therefore be determined not with reference to the description above, but with reference to the appended claims, along with their full range of equivalents.