Optical Fibers as a Key Element of Distributed Sensor Systems II

A special issue of Fibers (ISSN 2079-6439).

Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 November 2023) | Viewed by 2413

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Guest Editor
Department of Radiophotonics and Microwave Technologies, Kazan National Research Technical University Named after A.N. Tupolev-KAI, 10, Karl Marx Street, 420111 Kazan, Russia
Interests: fiber optic; sensors; fiber Bragg grating; addressable FBG; microwave photonic interrogation
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Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

Optical fibers coated with suitable protective layers are well suited to distributed fiber sensing systems (DFSS) based on Rayleigh, Raman, and Brillouin backscattering in small cross-sectional spaces and have found successful use in a wide variety of applications, including civil structures, transmission lines, railway, and downhole monitoring, among others. To improve overall system performance, many of these DFSS use multiple fibers. For example, DFSS use both single mode (SM) and multimode (MM) fibers for simultaneous measuring of several parameters, such as temperature and strain. The measured parameters are affected by wavelength-dependent loss caused by splices, stress on the optical fiber, fiber degradation in hydrogen environments, and radiation; this loss can also vary over time. As a compromise of SM and MM, the quasi-single mode operation in few mode (FM) fibers allows for larger input pump power before the establishment of detrimental effects induced by fiber nonlinearities, due to the well-controlled effective fundamental mode area. Moreover, FM supports only a few spatial modes, and the coupling between the fundamental mode and higher order modes can be largely suppressed with careful design. The performance of FM DFSS is mainly determined by the optical parameters of the used FM fibers. Thus, 2-mode and 4-mode FM fibers were designed and fabricated for DFSS, but the units do not limit the number of modes. An additional more advanced, single optical structure containing more than one core is multicore (MC) fibers, with small-diameter sensing elements that provide a high-density waveguide count. Using these fibers solves the problem of conduit and/or installation cable congestion and eliminates fiber-to-fiber positional error, as each waveguide in the MC fiber is permanently fixed in its parallel configuration with respect to other waveguides in the MC fiber structure. These MC fibers are typically coated with acrylate materials that are unsuitable for applications involving higher temperatures and harsh environments, such as may be encountered in many industrial sensing applications, but new coatings, for example, ETFE, are also proving useful.

Thus, this Special Issue aims to attract both theoretical and practical works that deal with optical fibers as a key element of DFSS. Of particular interest are submissions on, but not limited to, basic technologies of the modeling, design, fabrication, and utilization of optical fibers for different, including extremal, applications of DFSS; the effect of optical fibers’ characteristics on the performance of DFSS in general; and problems regarding the interconnections of different fiber types. This Special Issue will also focus on the fiber construction in modern DFSS multiplexing of the three main backscattering mechanisms—Rayleigh, Raman, and Brillouin—in conjunction with fiber Bragg gratings written in SM, MM, FM, and MC fibers. Review articles that describe the current state of the art are also welcome.

Dr. Oleg Morozov
Guest Editor

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Keywords

  • SM fibers
  • MM fibers
  • FM fibers
  • MC fibers
  • fiber bragg gratings in DFSS
  • quasi-distributed fiber sensor systems
  • optomechanics of fibers
  • fibers for arctic applications
  • fibers for atom energetics applications
  • fibers for underwater applications
  • fibers for space applications
  • fibers for railway applications
  • fibers for high-voltage applications
  • technologies and means for optical fiber monitoring
  • materials for optical fiber sensing development
  • photonic crystal fibers for sensing applications
  • fiber sensor systems for aviation and space applications

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Published Papers (3 papers)

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12 pages, 2167 KiB  
Article
Hi-Accuracy Method for Spectrum Shift Determination
by Nadezhda Pavlycheva, Ayna Niyazgulyyewa, Airat Sakhabutdinov, Vladimir Anfinogentov, Oleg Morozov, Timur Agliullin and Bulat Valeev
Fibers 2023, 11(7), 60; https://doi.org/10.3390/fib11070060 - 10 Jul 2023
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1534
Abstract
A new hi-accuracy method for slight-shift determination of low-resolution spectra is proposed. The method allows determining a spectrum shift with an accuracy exceeding the spectrum analyzer resolution to more than three orders of magnitude due to the mathematical post-processing. The method is based [...] Read more.
A new hi-accuracy method for slight-shift determination of low-resolution spectra is proposed. The method allows determining a spectrum shift with an accuracy exceeding the spectrum analyzer resolution to more than three orders of magnitude due to the mathematical post-processing. The method is based on representing the spectrum as a continuous and everywhere differentiable function; expanding it into the Taylor series; approximating all the function derivatives by finite differences of a given order. Thereafter, the spectrum shift is determined using the least-squares method. The method description, its mathematical foundation and the simulation results are given. The advantages of the application of the proposed method are shown. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Fibers as a Key Element of Distributed Sensor Systems II)
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13 pages, 4160 KiB  
Article
A Refinement of Backward Correlation Technique for Precise Brillouin Frequency Shift Extraction
by Fedor L. Barkov, Anton I. Krivosheev, Yuri A. Konstantinov and Andrey R. Davydov
Fibers 2023, 11(6), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/fib11060051 - 12 Jun 2023
Cited by 5 | Viewed by 1377
Abstract
A new method for extracting the Brillouin frequency shift (BFS) from the Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS), the modified backward correlation method (MBWC), is presented. The possibilities of using MBWC, and MBWC in combination with the Lorentzian curve fitting (LCF) based on Levenberg–Marquardt (LM) [...] Read more.
A new method for extracting the Brillouin frequency shift (BFS) from the Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS), the modified backward correlation method (MBWC), is presented. The possibilities of using MBWC, and MBWC in combination with the Lorentzian curve fitting (LCF) based on Levenberg–Marquardt (LM) method, are studied. The effectiveness of the new method, and its combination with LM, has been demonstrated for processing spectra with a low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). The experiments, which were in good agreement with the performed simulation, showed that at SNR = 0 dB, the combined (MBWC + LM) method provided the BFS extraction error of less than 4 MHz, while the state-of-the-art LM algorithm extracted it with the error greater than 4.5 MHz. The advantage of correlation methods becomes more significant with the decreasing SNR: at SNR = −2 dB, the LM’s error is 14.3 MHz, and that of the combined one is 8.1 MHz. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Fibers as a Key Element of Distributed Sensor Systems II)
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18 pages, 130315 KiB  
Article
Six-Core GeO2-Doped Silica Microstructured Optical Fiber with Induced Chirality
by Anton V. Bourdine, Vladimir V. Demidov, Konstantin V. Dukelskii, Alexander V. Khokhlov, Egishe V. Ter-Nersesyants, Sergei V. Bureev, Alexandra S. Matrosova, Grigori A. Pchelkin, Artem A. Kuznetsov, Oleg G. Morozov, Ilnur I. Nureev, Airat Zh. Sakhabutdinov, Timur A. Agliullin, Michael V. Dashkov, Alexander S. Evtushenko, Elena S. Zaitseva, Alexander A. Vasilets, Azat R. Gizatulin, Ivan K. Meshkov, Yaseera Ismail, Francesco Petruccione, Ghanshyam Singh, Manish Tiwari and Juan Yinadd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
Fibers 2023, 11(3), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/fib11030028 - 7 Mar 2023
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 2613
Abstract
This work presents a fabricated silica few-mode microstructured optical fiber (MOF) with a special six GeO2-doped core geometry, an outer diameter of 125 µm (that corresponds to conventional commercially available telecommunication optical fibers), and improved induced twisting up to 500 revolutions [...] Read more.
This work presents a fabricated silica few-mode microstructured optical fiber (MOF) with a special six GeO2-doped core geometry, an outer diameter of 125 µm (that corresponds to conventional commercially available telecommunication optical fibers), and improved induced twisting up to 500 revolutions per 1 m (under a rotation speed of 1000 revolutions per meter with a drawing speed of ~2 m per minute). The article discusses some technological aspects and issues of manufacturing the above-described twisted MOFs with complicated structures and geometry as GeO2-doped silica supporting elements for them. We present results of some measurements performed for fabricated samples of chiral silica six-GeO2-doped-core few-mode MOFs with various orders of twisting and both step and graded refractive indexes of “cores”. These tests contain research on MOF geometrical parameters, attenuation, and measurements of the far-field laser beam profile. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Fibers as a Key Element of Distributed Sensor Systems II)
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