The present invention refers to optical sensors based on reflectance spectroscopic techniques, and more in particular, it proposes an improved vehicle sensor for detecting the presence of water, ice, snow or the like on the surface of the roadway and estimate surface slipperiness in a local region or zone thereof.
Systems for detecting a state of the surface of a roadway in specific regions are known from, for example, EP 2597454 A1. In a system there disclosed, a measurement is performed based on the properties of the refractive index of a verification region of the roadway associated with a state condition, that is, a condition for distinguishing between two states of this verification region such as the presence of a substance (for example the presence of water). The device is formed by a first emitting group for providing a highly monochromatic electromagnetic beam in a first wavelength, and a second group emitting in a different wavelength. Both wavelengths strike the verification region and part of the reflected radiation strikes a photodetector. The amount of reflected light at each wavelength depends on the verification region's state. Electronic means then detect the amplitude of each wavelength relating to the complex refractive index of the region of the roadway associated with the presence of water, ice, etc.
However, such a system using more than one emitter with different wavelengths cannot be used for real-time measurement and/or estimation of road conditions a few meters or more in front of a moving vehicle, as the integration time required by its electronic means to detect the amplitude of each wavelength is too long.
In order to solve the problems of the prior art, the present invention provides a system and method for detecting a state condition of the roadway based on a dual optical frequency comb. A dual optical frequency comb (dual comb) is an optical source composed by two optical frequency combs (OFC). An OFC is a laser source whose spectrum consists of a series of discrete, equally spaced frequency lines. Also an OFC can be seen in the temporal domain as a pulsed laser source whose repetition rate is constant, being the repetition rate the inverse of the frequency difference between two consecutive frequency lines. When the beams of the two OFC (OFC1 and OFC2) of the dual comb reach a photodetector a signal S1 is generated whose radiofrequency spectrum is the heterodyning of the two OFCs.
In the present invention a beam from a dual comb strikes the verification region of a portion of the pavement and part of the reflected radiation strikes a photodetector. Reflected light contains spectroscopic information that is mapped into the radiofrequency spectrum by the photodetector. This method drastically reduces the time response requirements of the photodetector and of the electronics means to obtain the spectroscopic information that are needed when standard laser sources are used. As spectral information can be obtained with low integration times, the road condition can be estimated much in advance when the vehicle is moving and also better spatial resolution is obtained when the vehicle is moving. Thanks to the dual optical comb, measurement of pavement spectroscopic characteristics can be done several meters ahead of a moving vehicle, with a temporal resolution much lower than 300 μs.
To complete the description and provide for better understanding of the invention, a set of drawings is provided. Said drawings illustrate a preferred embodiment of the invention, which should not be interpreted as restricting the scope of the invention, but just as an example of how the invention can be carried out.
The present invention provides a method and system for detecting a state condition of the roadway. With reference to
The dual optical frequency comb (dual comb) is formed by two optical frequency combs. The optics transmit the optical beam thought free space to an area of the pavement called a verification region.
The output beam from the dual comb illuminates an area of the pavement ahead of the vehicle (about 25 meters ahead or more). This light interacts with the surface of the pavement and part of this light is back reflected to the vehicle. The back reflected light contains spectroscopic information about the state of the pavement (dry, wet, frost . . . ). The receiving optics collects the back reflected light and focus it onto the photodetector (i.e. a high-speed photodetector). The photodetector associated electronics obtains the RF spectrum of the detected signal. In the present embodiment, being not an exclusive method to obtain the RF spectrum of the detected signal, comprises a digitalization system that samples the photodiode signal and then by Fast Fourier Algorithm or by a digital lock-in algorithm obtains the RF spectrum that maps the optical spectrum of the detected light that contains the spectroscopic information of the pavement condition. The detection acquisition time contains at least one repetition time of the dual comb signal which is 1/(Δf2−Δf1).
In a particular embodiment, as an example, water presents an absorption peak at a wavelength of 1450 nm, while ice also presents this absorption peak but slightly shifted in wavelength and slightly different amplitude (
A dual comb suitable for use in the present invention can comprise two optical frequency comb generators (OFCG) that use the same laser diode with, for example, a wavelength of 1470 nm (
The other portion of the emitted power from the laser diode monochromatic light source is directed to a second OFCG. The second optical frequency comb generator is composed of at least two modulators. One is excited with frequency f (40 MHz) and the other with Δf2 (i.e 20.0001 GHz). As a result, the second OFC has an optical spectrum characterized by a central frequency f2=f1+40 MHz (1470 nm) and a number of optical modes spaced Δf2 (20.0001 GHz).
The output signals of the two OFCGs are combined to obtain a dual comb. Such dual comb, when detected by the photodiode, generates a RF signal S1. Each line in the RF spectrum of the signal S1 is generated by the heterodyning of one pair of lines from both OFC. As said before the central frequency f of signal S1 is generated by the heterodyning of central frequency f1 of the OFC1 with the central frequency f2 of the OFC2. The line 1 of signal S1 is generated by the heterodyning of line 1 of OFC1 (frequency f1+20 GHz) with line 1 of the OFC2 (frequency f1+40 MHz+20.0001 GHz), resulting a frequency of 40 MHz+100 kHz. The line 2 of signal S1 is generated by the heterodyning of line 2 of OFC1 (frequency f1+40 GHz) with line 2 of the OFC2 (frequency f1+40 MHz+40.0002 GHz), resulting a frequency of 40 MHz+200 kHz. And so on with the rest of the dual comb pairs of lines. Thus, the generated RF spectrum at the output of the detector (signal S1) in the present embodiment has a central frequency of 40 MHz and a frequency spacing of 0.0001 GHz (100 kHz), considering 30 pairs of lines the bandwidth of signal S1 is 30 MHz.
As said before the central frequencies f1 and f2 of the two OFC are very close in the optical spectrum, so both frequencies are affected in the same way if the absorption of the verification region of the pavement changes due to a change in the pavement condition. The same happens with each pair of frequencies of the dual comb, so changes of the absorption spectrum within the optical span of the dual comb due to a change in the pavement condition are directly reflected in the RF spectrum of signal S1. The spectral information about the pavement condition can be obtained at a maximum rate equal to the dual comb frequency difference (100 kHz in the present embodiment) which provides a time resolution of 1/100 kHz=10 μs. Higher signal to noise ratio is obtained by averaging several dual comb cycles. The present invention provides a spatial resolution of 1 cm at a vehicle speed of 120 km/h (300 μs required integration time) by averaging 30 dual comb cycles.
The pavement condition can be obtained directly from the RF spectrum of signal S1 as it is a copy of the diffuse reflectance spectrum of the pavement. In the present embodiment the central frequencies f1 and f2 are close to one isosbestic point in the absorption spectrum of water and ice (1470 nm). The presence of water or ice can be detected by comparing the amplitude of the line of frequency f=f2−f1 with an amplitude of reference for the pavement in the dry condition. Once water or ice are detected on the surface of the pavement, the pavement condition can be determined by calculating the ratios of the amplitudes of the frequencies around the central frequency f. For example, assuming the RF spectrum of the dual comb as the one represented in
Further advantages of the invention are:
As it is used herein, the term “comprises” and derivations thereof (such as “comprising”, etc.) should not be understood in an excluding sense, that is, these terms should not be interpreted as excluding the possibility that what is described and defined may include further elements, steps, etc.
On the other hand, the invention is obviously not limited to the specific embodiment(s) described herein, but also encompasses any variations that may be considered by any person skilled in the art (for example, as regards the choice of materials, dimensions, components, configuration, etc.) to be within the general scope of the invention as defined in the claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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19382399 | May 2019 | EP | regional |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20050134440 | Breed | Jun 2005 | A1 |
20080140318 | Breed | Jun 2008 | A1 |
20120286103 | Hilleary | Nov 2012 | A1 |
20160200161 | Van Den Bossche | Jul 2016 | A1 |
20180356528 | Schaffner | Dec 2018 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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102007013830 | Oct 2008 | DE |
102016118488 | Apr 2017 | DE |
2597454 | May 2013 | EP |
2543421 | Apr 2017 | GB |
WO-2013110072 | Jul 2013 | WO |
WO-2017198927 | Nov 2017 | WO |
WO-2018188811 | Oct 2018 | WO |
Entry |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20210107489 A1 | Apr 2021 | US |