Complete discrimination of strain and temperature using Brillouin frequency shift and birefringence in a polarization-maintaining fiber

This paper presents a novel method that realizes simultaneous and completely discriminative measurement of strain and temperature using one piece of Panda-type polarization-maintaining fibre. Two independent optical parameters in the fiber, the Brillouin frequency shift and the birefringence, are measured by evaluating the spectrum of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) and that of the dynamic acoustic grating generated in SBS to get two independent responses to strain and temperature. We found that the Brillouin frequency shift and the birefringence have the same signs for strain-dependence but opposite signs for temperaturedependence. In experiment, the birefringence in the PMF is characterized with a precision of ~10 -8 by detecting the diffraction spectrum of the dynamic acoustic grating. A reproducible accuracy of discriminating strain and temperature as fine as 3 micro-strains and 0.08 degrees Celsius is demonstrated. 2009 Optical Society of America OCIS codes: (060.2370) Fiber optics sensors; (290.5900) Scattering, stimulated Brillouin; (120.5820) Scattering measurements; (050.1950) Diffraction gratings. References and links 1. M. Nikles and L. Thevenaz, “Simple distributed fiber sensor based on Brillouin gain spectrum analysis,” Opt. Lett. 21, 758-760 (1996). 2. D. Garus, T. Gogolla, K. Krebber, and F. Schliep, “Brillouin optical-fiber frequency-domain analysis or distributed temperature and strain measurement,” J. Lightwave Technol. 15, 654-662 (1997). 3. K. Hotate and M. Tanaka, “Distributed fiber Brillouin strain sensing with 1-cm spatial resolution by correlation-cased continuous-wave technique,” IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 14, 179-181 (2002). 4. T. Horiguchi, T. Kurashima, and M. Tateda, “Tensile strain dependence of Brillouin frequency shift in silica optical fibers,” IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 1, 107-108 (1989). 5. W. Zou, Z. He, and K. Hotate, “Investigation of strainand temperature-dependences of Brillouin frequency shifts in GeO2-doped optical fibers,” J. Lightwave Technol. 26, 1854-1861 (2008). 6. C. C. Lee, P. W. Chiang, and S. Chi, “Utilization of a dispersion-shifted fiber for simultaneous measurement of distributed strain and temperature through Brillouin frequency shift,” IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 13, 1094-1096 (2001). 7. W. Zou, Z. He, M. Kishi, and K. Hotate, “Stimulated Brillouin scattering and its dependences on temperature and strain in a high-delta optical fiber with F-doped depressed inner cladding,” Opt. Lett. 32, 600-602 (2007). 8. T. P. Parker, M. Farhadiroushan, V. A. Handerek, and A. J. Rogers, “Temperature and strain dependence of the power level and frequency of spontaneous Brillouin scattering in optical fibers,” Opt. Lett. 22, 787-789 (1997). 9. T. Okoshi, “Single-polarization single-mode optical fibers,” IEEE J. Quantum Electron. 17, 879-884 (1981). 10. G. P. Agrawal, Nonlinear Fiber Optics, (Academic Press, 3rd version, 2001). 11. W. Zou, Z. He, and K. Hotate, “Two-dimensional finite element modal analysis of Brillouin gain spectra in optical fibers,” IEEE Photon. Technol. Lett. 18, 2487-2489 (2006). 12. K. Y. Song, W. Zou, Z. He, and K. Hotate, “All-optical dynamic grating generation based on Brillouin scattering in polarization-maintaining fiber,” Opt. Lett. 33, 926-929 (2008). #105264 $15.00 USD Received 12 Dec 2008; revised 14 Jan 2009; accepted 14 Jan 2009; published 21 Jan 2009 (C) 2009 OSA 2 February 2009 / Vol. 17, No. 3 / OPTICS EXPRESS 1248 13. X. Bao, Q. Yu, and L. Chen, “Simultaneous strain and temperature measurements with polarizationmaintaining fibers and their error analysis by use of a distributed Brillouin loss system,” Opt. Lett. 29, 13421344 (2004). 14. S. L. Floch and P. Cambon, “Study of Brillouin gain spectrum in standard single-mode optical fiber at low temperatures (1.4–370 K) and high hydrostatic pressures (1–250 bars),” Opt. Commun. 219, 395-410 (2003). 15. K. S. Chiang, D. Wong D, and P. L. Chu, “Strain-induced birefringence in a highly birefringent optical fiber,” Electron. Lett. 26, 1344-1346 (1990).


Introduction
Brillouin fiber-optic distributed sensors [1][2][3] have been extensively investigated for two decades and they show great potentials in applications of smart materials and smart structures. So far, Brillouin sensors are categorized by different schemes (i.e., time-domain [1], frequency-domain [2] and correlation-domain [3]) in resolving the sensing location, while their sensing mechanisms are all based on the linear dependences of Brillouin frequency shift (BFS) on strain and/or on temperature [4][5]. This common mechanism results in a heavy trouble for any of above techniques in discriminating the response to strain from that to temperature by using a single piece of fiber. In current practices, two fibers are used to discriminate the strain and the temperature: the first one is embedded or bonded at the target material/structure to feel the total effects of strain and temperature, while the second fiber is placed beside the first one and kept in loose condition so that it feels the effect of temperature only; then the strain and the temperature can be calculated by mathematics. A possible solution using one fiber is to monitor two acoustic resonance peaks at different orders of Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS) in a specially-designed optical fiber [6][7]. So far, this method cannot ensure accurate discrimination because all the acoustic resonance frequencies exhibit similar behaviors in their dependences on strain and temperature [5]. There is also a method reported for the discrimination relying on the possibility that the peak amplitude and BFS in the BGS could have quantitatively different dependences on strain and temperature [8]. Its accuracies is not sufficient either (e.g., several degrees Celsius and hundreds of micro-strains) mainly due to the low signal-to-noise ratio in the BGS peak-amplitude measurement, particularly for distributed sensing where troublesome noise from non-sensing locations is accumulated.
In this paper, we demonstrate a new method for complete discrimination of strain and temperature by use of only one piece of Panda-type polarization-maintaining fiber (PMF). Two independent optical parameters in the fiber, the BFS and the birefringence, are precisely measured to get two independent responses to strain and temperature, from which the strain and the temperature are figured out. The BFS is obtained by monitoring the BGS of stimulated Brillouin scattering (SBS) between pump and probe lightwaves counter-propagating along the fiber, where the pump and probe lightwaves are linearly polarized in one primary axis of the PMF. The birefringence is characterized by detecting the diffraction spectrum of the dynamic acoustic grating generated in SBS with a third lightwave linearly-polarized in the orthogonal primary axis. Experimentally, a discrimination accuracy of 3 µε and 0.08 o C is demonstrated.

Principle
The fiber that we employed for discriminative measurement of strain and temperature is a Panda-type PMF, which is composed of two B 2 O 3 -doped-silica stress-applying parts that are inserted in a pure-silica cladding and symmetrically placed beside a GeO 2 -doped-silica core. The fiber sample is only coated with a 250-µm polymer jacket, so that the coating's influence in this study is expected to be negligible. Due to the difference in thermal contraction between B 2 O 3 -doped silica and pure silica, two-dimensional stress is raised and stored into the core during the drawing process in fiber fabrication [9]. The residual stress makes the refractive index along x-axis (n x ) slightly greater than that along y-axis (n y ). Consequently, a lightwave linearly polarized along x-axis (so called slow axis) propagates slower than that along y-axis (fast axis). The difference between n x and n y (i.e., birefringence B = n xn y ) is small (e.g., B = ~3.3× 10 -4 for the fiber used here) but large enough so that lightwaves linearly-polarized along either x-or y-axis can propagate through the fiber while maintaining their polarization states in despite of external disturbance.
The first measurement we perform for the discrimination is the response of BFS to strain and temperature by evaluating the BGS of SBS in the fiber. As schematically shown in Fig.  1(a), two lightwaves, one is called pump with optical frequency f x and the other called probe with frequency f x ', counter-propagate through the fiber; the pump and the probe are linearly polarized along x-axis, for instance. When the frequency difference between pump and probe f xf x ' equals the fiber's acoustic resonance frequency ν B = 2n x f x ·V a /c, where V a is the acoustic velocity in the fiber and c the light speed in vacuum, SBS occurs in which an acoustic wave (phonons) propagating at velocity V a is significantly generated. The acoustic wave stretches or compresses the fiber core longitudinally, and thus modulates periodically the refractive index. Consequently, a Bragg grating moving forward at V a is formed. Such a dynamic acoustic grating diffracts a part of energy of the pump backward, and the diffracted lightwave (Stokes light) experiences the Doppler frequency shift ν B (also referred to as BFS) [10]. In the fiber, the acoustic velocity V a is proportional to the axial strain and the temperature on the fiber; therefore, the applied axial strain (∆ε) and temperature change (∆Τ =Τ i −25; T i the ambient temperature of the fiber) can be measured as detuning of BFS as where ν B0 is the BFS at room temperature (25 o C) and in loose condition; C ν ε (C ν Τ ) is the strain (temperature) coefficient of BFS. Both C ν ε and C ν Τ are positive because Young's modulus of silica is nonlinearly increased by either ∆ε or ∆Τ [5]. Secondly, we measure the effect on the fiber's birefringence from the applied strain (∆ε) and temperature variation (∆Τ ) by characterizing the dynamic acoustic grating in SBS with a y-polarized lightwave (readout light) launched into the fiber from the same end as the pump [see Fig. 1 We have demonstrated recently that, because the acoustic wave as a longitudinal wave exhibits no dependence on transverse polarization [11], the y-polarized readout light can also be strongly diffracted by the acoustic grating generated by x-polarized pump and probe, as long as the frequency f y of the y-polarized readout light satisfies a phase matching condition that requires f y to deviate from that of the x-polarized pump (f x ) by a birefringence-determined frequency deviation (f yx = f yf x = f x ·B/n x ) [12]. The birefringence B, on the other hand, has linear dependence on axial strain (∆ε) and temperature variation (∆Τ ). Therefore, we get a second measure of the response to ∆ε and ∆Τ by evaluating the variation in the frequency deviation f yx as where f yx0 is the frequency deviation at 25 o C and in loose condition; C f ε and C f Τ are the strain coefficient and the temperature coefficient of the frequency deviation, respectively. It is proved that the strain coefficient C f ε is positive while the temperature coefficient C f Τ is negative (see details in Appendix), which means that the responses of the birefringencedetermined frequency deviation to strain and to temperature are in opposite directions. By solving equations (1) and (2) jointly, we get the strain (∆ε) and temperature (∆Τ) as Because C f Τ has a sign opposite to those of other three coefficients, the denominator (3) has significant value, i.e., equations (1) and (2) are independent to each other, ensuring high discrimination accuracy. In experiment described later, we demonstrated an accuracy of 3 µε for strain and 0.08 o C for temperature. This result reflects the fact that the two physical phenomena/quantities that we utilize for the discrimination, the BFS and the birefringence of the fiber, are inherently independent.

Experimental details
Experimental demonstration on our novel method was performed with a setup shown in Fig. 2. Part A in Fig. 2  circulator, and polarization beam splitter/combiner) are introduced to ensure the pump and probe lightwaves polarized along x-axis. The light source is a 1,549-nm distributed-feedback laser diodes (DFB-LD1). The intensities of the pump and the probe incident to a 31-meter long fiber under test (FUT) are amplified with erbium-doped fiber amplifiers to ~140 mW and ~1 mW, respectively. The frequency of the probe is down-shifted from that of the pump for 10.8 GHz to 11.1 GHz with a single-sideband electro-optic modulator controlled by a microwave synthesizer, so the BGS is obtained as shown in Fig. 3(a), which depicts the BGS of the 31-meter FUT. Synchronous detection scheme was employed by chopping the pump with electro-optic modulator (EOM) and detecting with a lock-in amplifier (LIA1) to ensure high precision in characterization of BFS ν B . A reproducible accuracy of 0.1 MHz was confirmed [7]. Part B in Fig. 2 is for measuring the diffraction spectrum of the dynamic acoustic grating to y-polarized readout light (and thus the birefringence-determined frequency deviation f yx ). The readout light is generated from the other laser diode DFB-LD2 (central wavelength ~1,549 nm), whose optical frequency is ramp-swept by linearly modulating its dc injection current. Through the polarization beam splitter/combiner after a PM circulator, the linearly polarized readout light (intensity ~63 mW) is launched into the FUT with its polarization along the fiber's y-axis. At first, the acoustic phonons in SBS (and thus the dynamic acoustic grating) are maximized by fixing the microwave frequency to the single-sideband modulator at the BFS ν B obtained above. Under this condition, the readout light is strongly diffracted by the acoustic grating. The diffracted light is detected synchronously by using the other lock-in amplifier (LIA2) and recorded as a function of the ramp-swept optical frequency of DFB-LD2. In this way, the diffraction spectrum of the acoustic grating to y-polarized readout light is obtained. For measuring the diffraction spectrum, a tunable optical band-pass filter with ~20-GHz bandwidth is used to eliminate the leakage of x-polarized probe and pump. The diffraction spectrum of the dynamic acoustic grating established over the 31-meter FUT measured at room temperature is plotted in Fig. 3(b). Figure 3(b) shows that the diffraction spectrum has a profile Gaussian-like rather than Lorentzian. By least-squares Gaussian fitting to the experimental data in Fig. 3(b), we get the birefringence-determined frequency deviation f yx = 43.8765 GHz representing the fiber's birefringence B = 3.27773 × 10 -4 , and the FWHM (full width at the half magnitude) as ~320 MHz. It is not clear why the diffraction spectrum is Gaussian-like and the width of the diffraction spectrum is quite larger than the Brillouin linewdith. Further research is needed on this point. Repeatability test result validates that the frequency deviation can be measured within a standard error of δf yx = 4 MHz corresponding to a reproducible δB = 3 × 10 -8 . The accuracy is fine enough to characterize the birefringence's dependence on strain and temperature as described below. Comparatively, a published method based on simply switching the SBS measurement along x-axis and y-axis [13] can only give birefringence accuracy around 10 -5 , which is insufficient for characterizing strain and temperature responses of the birefringence and for strain and temperature discrimination. The BGS and the diffraction spectrum were measured when different strains were applied upon the 31-meter FUT. The fiber was hand-wound around a couple of drums for tens of circles that were inserted into a temperature-controlled water bath and mounted on x-stages for applying strain [7]. The applied strain was evaluated as the ratio of the displacement of the movable x-stage to the half-circle segment fiber length. The temperature of the water bath can be controlled with 0.1-o C accuracy. The measurement results are shown in Fig. 4(a) and 4(c). As the applied strain increases, both the BGS and the diffraction spectrum move towards a higher frequency. It is noticed that both spectra broaden while their peak amplitudes decrease as the applied strain increasing. This is because each circle of fiber segment possesses slightly different zero-strain initial condition so that more or less position-dependent stretched strain along the fiber is introduced. As the result, the measured spectra that are the integral over the whole-length fiber become broadened, and the peak amplitudes that are inversely proportional to the width of the spectra [10] reduce.
Next, we investigated the influence of the fiber's temperature on the BGS and the diffraction spectrum of the dynamic grating to y-polarized readout light. Figures 4(b) and 4(d) illustrate the BGS and the diffraction spectra, respectively, with respect to temperature. It is shown of great interest that the BFS ν B moves towards a higher frequency whereas the frequency deviation f yx shifts to a lower frequency as the temperature increases. The figures also show that both spectra's widths decrease but their peak amplitudes increase with temperature. The increased peak amplitudes are due to the reduced acoustic loss with  4. Dependences of the spectra on strain and temperature. Measured Brillouin gain spectra when applied strain is enlarged (a) or temperature is increased (b). Measured diffraction spectra of the acoustic grating with an incremental strain (c) or temperature (d). Symbolic points, experimental data. Solid curves denotes Lorentzian fitting in (a) and (b) or Gaussian fitting in (c) and (d) giving Brillouin frequency shift (νB) or the birefringence-determined frequency deviation (fyx), respectively.