4.6 Article

Optical Frequency-Domain Reflectometry Based Distributed Temperature Sensing Using Rayleigh Backscattering Enhanced Fiber

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23125748

Keywords

distributed optical fiber sensing; Rayleigh backscattering enhanced fiber; optical frequency-domain reflectometry; temperature measurement

Ask authors/readers for more resources

An innovative distributed temperature sensing method using optical frequency-domain reflectometry (OFDR) and Rayleigh backscattering enhanced fiber (RBEF) is proposed. The method accurately demodulates temperature variation by analyzing the position shift of high backscattering points along the RBEF. Experimental results show a linear relationship between temperature variation and the total position displacement of high backscattering points. The temperature sensing resolution is determined by the distribution of high backscattering points and the spatial resolution of the OFDR system.
An innovative optical frequency-domain reflectometry (OFDR)-based distributed temperature sensing method is proposed that utilizes a Rayleigh backscattering enhanced fiber (RBEF) as the sensing medium. The RBEF features randomly high backscattering points; the analysis of the fiber position shift of these points before and after the temperature change along the fiber is achieved using the sliding cross-correlation method. The fiber position and temperature variation can be accurately demodulated by calibrating the mathematical relationship between the high backscattering point position along the RBEF and the temperature variation. Experimental results reveal a linear relationship between temperature variation and the total position displacement of high backscattering points. The temperature sensing sensitivity coefficient is 7.814 & mu;m/(m & BULL;& DEG;C), with an average relative error temperature measurement of -1.12% and positioning error as low as 0.02 m for the temperature-influenced fiber segment. In the proposed demodulation method, the spatial resolution of temperature sensing is determined by the distribution of high backscattering points. The temperature sensing resolution depends on the spatial resolution of the OFDR system and the length of the temperature-influenced fiber. With an OFDR system spatial resolution of 12.5 & mu;m, the temperature sensing resolution reaches 0.418 & DEG;C per meter of RBEF under test.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available