4.5 Article

Overcoming Nonlocal Effects and Brillouin Threshold Limitations in Brillouin Optical Time-Domain Sensors

Journal

IEEE PHOTONICS JOURNAL
Volume 7, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JPHOT.2015.2498543

Keywords

Brillouin distributed sensors; Brillouin optical time-domain analysis; nonlocal effects; Brillouin threshold; optical fiber sensors; stimulated Brillouin scattering

Funding

  1. Universidad Publica de Navarra
  2. Universidad de Cantabria
  3. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovacion [TEC2013-47264-C2]
  4. Feder funds

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We demonstrate, for the first time to our knowledge, a Brillouin optical timedomain analysis (BOTDA) sensor that is able to operate with a probe power larger than the Brillouin threshold of the deployed sensing fiber and that is free from detrimental nonlocal effects. The technique is based on a dual-probe-sideband setup in which an optical frequency modulation of the probe waves along the fiber is introduced. This makes the optical frequency of the Brillouin interactions induced by each probe wave on the pump vary along the fiber so that two broadband Brillouin gain and loss spectra that perfectly compensate are created. As a consequence, the pulse spectral components remain undistorted, avoiding nonlocal effects. Therefore, very large probe power can be injected, which improves the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) in detection for long-range BOTDA. Moreover, the probe power can even exceed the Brillouin threshold limit due to its frequency modulation, which reduces the effective amplification of spontaneous Brillouin scattering in the fiber. Experiments demonstrate the technique in a 50-km sensing link in which 8 dBm of probe power is injected.

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