4.7 Article

High-Speed and High-Resolution Optical Fiber Sensor Interrogation Based on Optical Injection in Semiconductor Laser and Microwave Filtering

Journal

JOURNAL OF LIGHTWAVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 40, Issue 20, Pages 6805-6812

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/JLT.2022.3209083

Keywords

Optical fiber sensors; Optical filters; Optical fibers; Microwave filters; Optical pulses; Wavelength measurement; High-speed optical techniques; Fiber Bragg gratings; microwave photonics; optical injection; semiconductor lasers; strain sensor; wavelength-to-time mapping

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61975248]
  2. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council of the U.K. [EP/T51732X/1, EP/S005625/1]

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A novel microwave photonic approach is proposed and demonstrated for real-time and high-speed interrogation of optical fiber sensors. The method utilizes optical injection in a semiconductor laser and simple passive microwave frequency filtering. Experimental results show that high interrogation speed and measurement sensitivity have been achieved.
Real-time and high-speed interrogation of optical fiber sensors normally requires sophisticated detection systems. Here a novel microwave photonic approach for interrogation of high-speed and high-resolution optical fiber sensors based on optical injection in a semiconductor laser and simple passive microwave frequency filtering is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. An intensity-modulated master laser is injected into a semiconductor laser to produce a wavelength scanning optical sideband. A fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensor is embedded into a fiber ring laser. Beating of the scanning optical sideband and the fiber ring laser wavelength at a photodetector generates a linearly frequency-chirped microwave signal. The real-time wavelength shift of the FBG sensor is converted into the change of the microwave center frequency. After a simple passive microwave bandpass filter, two electrical pulses are obtained corresponding to positive and negative frequency sweeping. The FBG wavelength can be retrieved from the time interval of the two pulses. A proof-of-concept experiment to measure an FBG strain sensor has been carried out. A high interrogation speed of 1 MHz and measurement sensitivity of 17.3 ns/mu epsilon have been achieved.

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