Optical interrogator for performing interferometry using fiber Bragg gratings
US-10416005-B2 · Sep 17, 2019 · US
US11747133B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11747133-B2 |
| Application number | US-202117237438-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Apr 22, 2021 |
| Priority date | Apr 28, 2020 |
| Publication date | Sep 5, 2023 |
| Grant date | Sep 5, 2023 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A system and method for demodulation of a fiber optic interferometric sensor are provided. Another aspect pertains to a system and method employing a single laser to generate multiple quadratic wavelengths to demodulate fiber optic interferometric sensors with approximately sinusoidal fringes. Yet another aspect of the present system and method uses a single frequency laser which is split into multiple paths using a fiber optic coupler, with one path including an intensity modulator and another path including an acousto-optic modulator, whereafter the paths are recombined into a fiber which leads to an interferometric sensor, and the light reflected from the sensor is then directed to a photodetector. A further aspect employs a single frequency laser which is split into multiple paths, with the light in the paths being modulated at different frequencies, whereafter the paths are recombined into a fiber which leads to an interferometric sensor.
Opening claim text (preview).
The invention claimed is: 1. A demodulation system comprising: a single frequency laser emitting a laser beam into an optical fiber; a fiber-optic split coupler dividing the laser beam into a first beam in a first arm and a second beam in a second arm; a first intensity modulator modulating the intensity of the laser beam in the first arm at a first modulation frequency to form a first laser beam portion; a second intensity modulator modulating the intensity of the laser beam in the second arm at a second modulation frequency different than the first frequency; a frequency shifter shifting the frequency of the laser beam in the second arm to form a second laser beam portion; a coupler coupling the first laser beam portion and the second laser beam portion; an interferometric sensor reflecting the first laser beam portion as a first line of light and the second laser beam portion as a second line of light, wherein a difference of the first line of light and the second line of light corresponds to a phase difference of (m+1/4)π, where m is an integer, of spectral fringes of the sensor so that the first line and second line are at different quadrature points of fringes; a photodetector receiving light reflected from the sensor; and an envelope detector detecting variations in reflected power in the first laser line and the second laser line which are at the quadrature positions of the spectral fringes, such that the interferometric sensor provides a sensitive response to a spectral shift. 2. The system of claim 1 , wherein the laser generates multiple quadratic wavelengths to demodulate the interferometric sensor with sinusoidal fringes. 3. The system of claim 1 , wherein the laser beam is split into multiple paths, with the light in the paths being modulated at different frequencies, whereafter the paths are recombined into another fiber which leads to the interferometric sensor. 4. The system of claim 1 , further comprising at least one electric filter and at least one envelop detector, two laser beam wavelengths being separated and signals from two quadrature channels being obtained through intensity modulation of one or both channels, with assistance of an electronic filter and the envelop detector. 5. The system of claim 1 , further comprising multiple laser beam channels being separated using an at least three-port AOM and time-division multiplexing/demultiplexing. 6. The system of claim 1 , wherein the interferometric sensor is part of a multiplexed sensor system where only one frequency shifter is shared by multiples of the interferometric sensor. 7. The system of claim 1 , further comprising: a workpiece to which the interferometric sensor is attached; the interferometric sensor providing accurate ultrasound detection even when a spectrum of the interferometric sensor experiences large environmental drifts including temperature variations in the workpiece. 8. The system of claim 1 , further comprising: a workpiece to which the interferometric sensor is attached, the workpiece being one of: an aircraft wing component, an infrastructure bridge, a power transmission structure, or a pipeline; the interferometric sensor sensing ultrasonic acoustic signals to determine if any cracks or other undesirable structural characteristics are present in the workpiece adjacent to the interferometric sensor. 9. The system of claim 1 , wherein: the interferometric sensor is a two-beam fiber Mach-Zehnder interferometer including multiple optical paths, a first of the paths being a signal arm and a second of the paths being a reference arm; light from the laser beam is amplitude-divided by a first fiber coupler into two laser beams propagating in the arms; the signal arm senses disturbances in an external environment and the reference arm is maintained in a relatively constant environment; an optical phase is changed by disturbances when the laser beam travels through the signal arm, thereby producing a phase difference between the two split beams, which are thereafter recombined by a second fiber coupler; and output beams are then detected by multiples of the photodetector, and converted into a fringe signals in anti-phase. 10. The system of claim 1 , wherein: the interferometric sensor is a fiber Michelson interferometer, wherein signal and reference paths are terminated by Faraday mirrors; and a signal laser beam and a reference laser beam are reflected by the associated mirrors back to a coupler where they are recombined to generate an interference signal. 11. The system of claim 1 , wherein: the interferometric sensor is a fiber Sagnac interferometer including a two-beam, common-path interferometer in which two laser beams from at least one coupler pass along the same fiber loop but in opposite directions; an interference fringe is generated when the opposite beams recombine at the at least one coupler; and the interferometric sensor is configured to sense at least one of: electrical current, voltage, an electric field or a magnetic field. 12. The system of claim 1 , wherein: the interferometric sensor is a Fabry-Perot interferometer including an interferometric cavity formed by multiple parallel reflectors or partial mirrors, on either side of an optically transparent medium; and an interference fringe, caused by multiple reflections of the laser beam in the cavity. 13. The system of claim 1 , further comprising a polarization controller configured to adjust polarization of light of the laser beam leaving the modulator. 14. A demodulation system comprising: a laser coupled to a first optical fiber; multiple arms splitting from the optical fiber; an optical frequency shifter connected to at least one of the arms configured to generate different laser wavelengths at quadrature positions of interferometric fringes; an interferometric sensor receiving a combination of a frequency-shifted laser beam from the shifter and an unshifted laser beam wherein a difference of the frequency shifted laser beam and the unshifted laser beam corresponds to phase difference of (m+1/4)π, where m is an integer, of spectral fringes of the sensor so that frequency shifted laser beam and the unshifted laser beam are at different quadrature points of fringes; and a photodetector receiving light from the sensor. 15. The system of claim 14 , further comprising: at least one electronic filter located downstream of the photodetector; at least one envelope detector connected to the electronic filter; and the shifter including at least one of: an intensity modulator or an acousto-optic modulator. 16. The system of claim 14 , further comprising: a fiber optic coupler; the two arms including an intensity modulator connected in one of the arms and a an acousto-optic modulator connected in a second of the arms; at least a second optical fiber; the arms being recombined into the second optical fiber which leads to the interferometric sensor; and laser light sent to the interferometric sensor including multiple laser lines whose difference is equal to an amount of frequency shift. 17. The system of claim 14 , wherein light from the laser is split into the arms, with the light in the arms being modulated at different frequencies, whereafter the paths are recombined into another fiber which leads to the interferometric sensor. 18. The system of claim 14 , wherein the arms are separated using the shifter which includes an at least three-port AOM and time-division multiplexing/demultiplexing. 19. The system of claim 14 , further
Two or more reference or object arms in one interferometer · CPC title
using beat frequencies · CPC title
using a Bragg gratings · CPC title
Loop interferometers, e.g. Sagnac, loop mirror · CPC title
Using polarization in the interferometer · CPC title
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.