676 research outputs found
The State-of-the-Art of Brillouin Distributed Fiber Sensing
The distributed Brillouin sensing technique has been developed rapidly since its first demonstration three decades ago. Numerous investigations on the performance enhancement of Brillouin sensors in respect to spatial resolution, sensing range, and measurement time have paved the way to its industrial and commercial applications. This chapter provides an overview of different Brillouin sensing techniques and mainly focuses on the most widely used one, the Brillouin optical time domain analysis (BOTDA). The history and the development of Brillouin sensing regarding the performance enhancement in various methods and their records will be reviewed, commented, and compared with each other. As well, related sensing errors and limitations will be discussed, together with the corresponding strategies to avoid them
Fiber Optic Sensors and Fiber Lasers
The optical fiber industry is emerging from the market for selling simple accessories using optical fiber to the new optical-IT convergence sensor market combined with high value-added smart industries such as the bio industry. Among them, fiber optic sensors and fiber lasers are growing faster and more accurately by utilizing fiber optics in various fields such as shipbuilding, construction, energy, military, railway, security, and medical.This Special Issue aims to present novel and innovative applications of sensors and devices based on fiber optic sensors and fiber lasers, and covers a wide range of applications of optical sensors. In this Special Issue, original research articles, as well as reviews, have been published
Recent Progress in Brillouin Scattering Based Fiber Sensors
Brillouin scattering in optical fiber describes the interaction of an electro-magnetic field (photon) with a characteristic density variation of the fiber. When the electric field amplitude of an optical beam (so-called pump wave), and another wave is introduced at the downshifted Brillouin frequency (namely Stokes wave), the beating between the pump and Stokes waves creates a modified density change via the electrostriction effect, resulting in so-called the stimulated Brillouin scattering. The density variation is associated with a mechanical acoustic wave; and it may be affected by local temperature, strain, and vibration which induce changes in the fiber effective refractive index and sound velocity. Through the measurement of the static or dynamic changes in Brillouin frequency along the fiber one can realize a distributed fiber sensor for local temperature, strain and vibration over tens or hundreds of kilometers. This paper reviews the progress on improving sensing performance parameters like spatial resolution, sensing length limitation and simultaneous temperature and strain measurement. These kinds of sensors can be used in civil structural monitoring of pipelines, bridges, dams, and railroads for disaster prevention. Analogous to the static Bragg grating, one can write a moving Brillouin grating in fibers, with the lifetime of the acoustic wave. The length of the Brillouin grating can be controlled by the writing pulses at any position in fibers. Such gratings can be used to measure changes in birefringence, which is an important parameter in fiber communications. Applications for this kind of sensor can be found in aerospace, material processing and fine structures
Recent developments in fibre optic shape sensing
This paper presents a comprehensive critical review of technologies used in the development of fibre optic shape sensors (FOSSs). Their operation is based on multi-dimensional bend measurements using a series of fibre optic sensors. Optical fibre sensors have experienced tremendous growth from simple bend sensors in 1980s to full three-dimensional FOSSs using multicore fibres in recent years. Following a short review of conventional contact-based shape sensor technologies, the evolution trend and sensing principles of FOSSs are presented. This paper identifies the major optical fibre technologies used for shape sensing and provides an account of the challenges and emerging applications of FOSSs in various industries such as medical robotics, industrial robotics, aerospace and mining industry
Novel Specialty Optical Fibers and Applications
Novel Specialty Optical Fibers and Applications focuses on the latest developments in specialty fiber technology and its applications. The aim of this reprint is to provide an overview of specialty optical fibers in terms of their technological developments and applications. Contributions include:1. Specialty fibers composed of special materials for new functionalities and applications in new spectral windows.2. Hollow-core fiber-based applications.3. Functionalized fibers.4. Structurally engineered fibers.5. Specialty fibers for distributed fiber sensors.6. Specialty fibers for communications
Theory of Stimulated Brillouin Scattering in Fibers for Highly Multimode Excitations
Stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) is an important nonlinear optical
effect which can both enable and impede optical processes in guided wave
systems. Highly multi-mode excitation of fibers has been proposed as a novel
route towards efficient suppression of SBS in both active and passive fibers.
To study the effects of multimode excitation generally, we develop a theory of
SBS for arbitrary input excitations, fiber cross section geometries and
refractive index profiles. We derive appropriate nonlinear coupled mode
equations for the signal and Stokes modal amplitudes starting from vector
optical and tensor acoustic equations. Using applicable approximations, we find
an analytical formula for the SBS (Stokes) gain susceptibility, which takes
into account the vector nature of both optical and acoustic modes exactly. We
show that upon multimode excitation, the SBS power in each Stokes mode grows
exponentially with a growth rate that depends parametrically on the
distribution of power in the signal modes. Specializing to isotropic fibers we
are able to define and calculate an effective SBS gain spectrum for any choice
of multimode excitation. The peak value of this gain spectrum determines the
SBS threshold, the maximum SBS-limited power that can be sent through the
fiber. We show theoretically that peak SBS gain is greatly reduced by highly
multimode excitation due to gain broadening and relatively weaker intermodal
SBS gain. We demonstrate that equal excitation of the 160 modes of a
commercially available, highly multimode circular step index fiber raises the
SBS threshold by a factor of 6.5, and find comparable suppression of SBS in
similar fibers with a D-shaped cross-section
Small business innovation research. Abstracts of completed 1987 phase 1 projects
Non-proprietary summaries of Phase 1 Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) projects supported by NASA in the 1987 program year are given. Work in the areas of aeronautical propulsion, aerodynamics, acoustics, aircraft systems, materials and structures, teleoperators and robotics, computer sciences, information systems, spacecraft systems, spacecraft power supplies, spacecraft propulsion, bioastronautics, satellite communication, and space processing are covered
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