1. Introduction
Slope-assisted (SA-) Brillouin optical correlation-domain reflectometry (BOCDR) is a recently developed structural health-monitoring system, which can measure strain, temperature distributions along the sensing fiber [
1]. Unlike standard BOCDR system [
2], SA-BOCDR can obtain measurement results in real time since it uses a spectral power change at a certain frequency in the Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS) instead of acquiring the whole BGS to derive the Brillouin frequency shift (BFS).
Since the first proposal of SA-BOCDR [
1], not only its fundamental operation, but also some unique features, including beyond-nominal-resolution effect [
3] and measurement sensitivity dependencies on experimental conditions [
4], have been well investigated to improve its performance. But in the previous reports, the dynamic range were restricted to the linear range of the BGS (detailed definition is given in [
1]). However, it is well known that the linear range of the BGS is relatively narrow (~70 MHz) and corresponds to the strain of ~0.15% (~64 K for temperature change) [
1]. Considering practical applications, it is required to extend the dynamic range of SA-BOCDR.
In this work, first, as a simplest method to solve this problem, we use the nonlinear range of the BGS and perform distributed measurements with large strains. However, it turns out to be that employing the nonlinear spectral range is ineffective in widening the maximal detectable strain of the system due to the bell-shaped background noise [
5,
6] in the BGS. Thus, as a new method for enhancing the strain dynamic range, we show that this background noise can be utilized for strain sensing by deteriorating the spatial resolution of the system. Then, we prove that there is a trade-off relation between the strain dynamic range and spatial resolution in SA-BOCDR and successfully achieve a strain dynamic range of >0.6% at the cost of three times lowered spatial resolution, which is three times wider than the previous record.
2. Experiments
The experimental of SA-BOCDR is shown in
Figure 1, which is basically the same as that of the previously reported [
1]. As a light source, we used a 1550 nm distributed feedback laser. The resolution bandwidth and the video bandwidth of the electrical spectrum analyzer were set to be 10 MHz and 10 kHz, respectively. The repetition rate was set to 100 Hz, and averaging was performed 512 times on an oscilloscope to improve the signal-to-noise ratio. To begin with, as a fiber under test (FUT), we used a 7.5-m-long silica single-mode fiber with a BFS of 10.86 GHz at room temperature (23 °C). The modulation frequency
fm and amplitude
∆f were set to 9.80–9.97 MHz and 0.27 GHz, respectively, corresponding to the measurement range
dm of ~10.3 m and the theoretical spatial resolution
R of ~0.37 m according to Equations (15) and (16) in [
7]. Note that
fm were maintained at 9.89 MHz when we performed single-point measurements to obtain the Brillouin signal only from the correlation peak (located ~4.0 m away from the end of the second-port pigtail of an optical circulator).
First, using the FUT shown in
Figure 2, we performed distributed strain measurements while applying strains of 0–0.7% to a ~0.37-m-long section (same as the nominal spatial resolution
R) and obtained the spectral power changes at each strain. Note that only strains of ~0.15% (~1/5 of 0.7%) have been measured so far using SA-BOCDR.
Figure 3a shows the normalized power change dependence on applied strain. The spectral power change was almost linear on strain in the range of 0–0.15%, which well agrees with previous reports. However, for strains of >0.2%, the power change became saturated and kept almost constant. Thus, the strain dynamic range was not drastically enhanced (only up to ~0.25%), which indicates that we cannot directly employ the nonlinear region of the BGS.
To clarify the origin of this limitation, we acquired the BGS at each strain as shown in
Figure 3b. With increasing strain, the spectral power at 10.85 GHz decreased when the applied strain was smaller than 0.25%. However, as we confirmed in
Figure 3a, for strains of >0.25%, the spectral power was almost constant owing to the bell-shaped background noise [
5,
6], which intrinsically restrict the strain dynamic range of the system.
Previous researches on BOCDA [
5,
6] have reported that this background noise is caused by the accumulation of distorted BGSs at “non-correlation” sections along the FUT and inherently unavoidable in correlation-domain systems [
2,
8]. However, in general, the closer the non-correlation sections are to the correlation peak, the greater their contribution to the noise floor becomes. Therefore, we thought of an idea that, if we accept deteriorated spatial resolution, the large amount of the background noise could be shifted in accordance with applied strain, which eventually enables widening the strain dynamic range of the system.
To confirm this trade-off relation between the strain dynamic range and spatial resolution, we performed similar experiments while elongating the length of the strain
Lε (which can be regarded as redefined spatial resolution) from
R to 3
R. Figure 4a shows the BGSs measured when the strains of 0–0.5% were applied to the 3
R-long section in the FUT. Unlike in the case of
Lε =
R (
Figure 3b), the spectral power at 10.85 GHz decreased even when the applied strain was larger than 0.25%.
Figure 4b shows the normalized power change dependence on strain. The power change increased with increasing strain regardless of
Lε, and the saturation value of the power change also increased with increasing
Lε. This indicates that part of the noise floor shifted in accordance with applied strain. Then, in
Figure 5, we plotted the strain at saturation (which can be regarded as maximal measurable strain; defined as the strain at which the power change reached approximately 86.5% of its saturation value) as a function of
Lε. In this range, as
Lε increased, strain dynamic range increased almost linearly with a coefficient of 0.2%, and we experimentally proved that three folded strain dynamic range can be achieved with three times lowered spatial resolution.