Citation:
Poiana, D. A., Garcia-Souto, J. A., & Bao, X. (2021). Acousto-Optic Comb Interrogation System for Random Fiber Grating Sensors with Sub-nm Resolution. Sensors, 21(12), 3967.
ISSN:
1424-3210
DOI:
10.3390/s21123967
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-contributor-funder:
Comunidad de Madrid Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España) Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (España)
Sponsor:
Funding: Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte (Spain) para la Formación de Profesorado
Universitario FPU2016: FPU16/03695; Ministerio De Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (Spain),
ayudas de movilidad EST18/00617. This work has been supported by the Madrid Government (Comunidad de Madrid-Spain) under the Multiannual Agreement with UC3M in the line of Excellence
of University Professors (EPUC3M26), and in the context of the V PRICIT (Regional Programme of
Research and Technological Innovation).
Project:
Gobierno de España. FPU16/03695 Gobierno de España. EST18/00617 Comunidad de Madrid. EPUC3M26
The broad-frequency response and nanometer-range displacements of ultrasound detection are essential for the characterization of small cracks, structural health monitoring and non-destructive evaluation. Those perturbations are generated at sub-nano-strain to The broad-frequency response and nanometer-range displacements of ultrasound detection are essential for the characterization of small cracks, structural health monitoring and non-destructive evaluation. Those perturbations are generated at sub-nano-strain to nano-strain levels. This corresponds to the sub-nm level and, therefore, to about 0.1% of wavelength change at 1550 nm, making it difficult to detect them by conventional interferometric techniques. In this paper, we propose a demodulation system to read the random fiber grating spectrum using a self-heterodyne acousto-optic frequency comb. The system uses a self-heterodyne approach to extract phase and amplitude modulated signals to detect surface acoustic waves with sub-nanometer amplitudes in the frequency domain. The method can detect acoustic frequencies of 1 MHz and the associated displacement. The system is calibrated via phase detection with a heterodyne interferometer, which has a limited frequency response of up to 200 kHz. The goal is to achieve sub-nanometer strain detection at MHz frequency with random fiber gratings.[+][-]