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| United States Patent | 5201015 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5201015.html |
| Inventor(s) | von Bieren; Karlheinz (Camarillo, CA);
Arabsadeghabadi; Akbar (Simi Valley, CA);
Skochinski; Phillip (Woodland Hills, CA) |
| Abstract | A length of optical fiber is attached to a flexible base plate at two
spaced apart locations. The portion of the fiber between the two points of
connection is under a bias tension. An interferometer is formed in the
tensioned portion of the optical fiber. The sensor is mounted to a surface
and changes in interference patterns output by the interferometer are
monitored to measure strain in the surface. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5201015 |
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Conformal fiber optic strain sensor |
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| Publication Date |
April 6, 1993 |
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| Filing Date |
September 19, 1991 |
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Title Information  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates generally to apparatus and methods for measuring
strain. More particularly, this invention relates to measuring strain
along a curved surface. Still more particularly, this invention relates to
a strain sensor having a flexible fiber optic sensing element.
Fiber optic sensors have a wide variety of applications for sensing
parameters such as temperature, pressure, strain, acoustic waves,
electromagnetic waves and rotation. Strain in an optical fiber produces an
optical path length change by physically changing the length of the fiber
and by changing its index of refraction by means of the photoelastic
effect. A number of parameters may be measured when the optical fiber is
mounted in a transducer that produces a strain in the fiber when the
parameter of interest changes.
The most sensitive fiber optic sensors detect changes in a parameter of
interest by monitoring interference between two signals. One or both of
the optical signals are exposed to the parameter. The signals have
different optical paths and experience a relative phase change as the
parameter changes. Commonly used interferometric sensors include
Mach-Zehnder, Michelson, Fabry-Perot, ring resonator, polarimetric and
two-mode fiber interferometers. Most of these sensors have two separate
fibers that form sensing and reference arms. A length of a single fiber
may function as an interferometer if it guides two modes that exhibit
different responses to changes in the parameter being measured.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
A fiber optic strain sensor according to the present invention for
measuring strains along a curved surface, comprises a flexible base plate
and a length of optical fiber attached to the base plate at two spaced
apart locations. A sensing portion of the optical fiber is then located
between the two spaced apart locations. The strain sensor further includes
means for applying a bias tension to the sensing portion of the optical
fiber and means for forming an interferometer in the sensing portion of
the optical fiber.
A method according to the present invention for forming a fiber optic
strain sensor comprises the steps of providing a flexible base plate and
attaching a length of optical fiber to the base plate at two spaced apart
locations with a sensing portion of the optical fiber being between the
two spaced apart locations. The method further includes the steps of
applying a bias tension to the sensing portion of the optical fiber; and
forming an interferometer in the sensing portion of the optical fiber.
The step of applying a bias tension to the sensing portion of the optical
fiber may comprise the steps of bending a central portion of the base
plate, fixing the optical fiber to the base plate with the two spaced
apart locations being on opposite sides of the central portion and
straightening the base plate so that the portion of the optical fiber that
is between the two spaced apart locations is under tension.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a plan view showing a coil of optical fiber attached to a base
plate to form a fiber optic strain sensor according to the present
invention;
FIG. 2 is a side elevation view of a base plate and a fiber optic coil
showing how the coil may be attached to the base plate to provide a bias
tension to the fiber;
FIG. 3 is a side elevation view of a fiber optic strain sensor according to
the present invention;
FIG. 4 end elevation view of the fiber optic strain sensor of FIG. 3;
FIG. 5 schematically illustrates the strain sensor according to the present
invention used as a Michelson interferometer; and
FIG. 6 schematically illustrates the strain sensor according to the present
invention used as a Mach-Zehnder interferometer.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring to FIG. 1, a fiber optic strain sensor 10 according to the
present invention includes an optical fiber 12 that is mounted to a base
plate 14. The optical fiber 12 preferably is a two-mode fiber that guides
both the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.11 modes. The optical fiber 12 has a portion
that is formed into a coil 16, which preferably is has straight sides 17A
and 17B and generally semicircular ends 18A and 18B. The coil 16 is
sometimes referred to as having a racetrack shape.
The fiber optic coil 16 is attached to the base plate 14 with the straight
sides 17A and 17B under a defined bias tension. The tension in the fiber
may range from about the weight of a five gram mass to the weight of a 25
gram mass. In a preferred embodiment of the invention the tension in the
optical fiber loop is about the weight of ten grams, or approximately 0.1
Newton. The actual tension that may be used depends upon the application
and the tensile strength of the optical fiber.
FIG. 2 illustrates how the fiber optic coil 16 may be formed to have a
selected tension in the straight sides 17A and 17B. First the central
portion 20 of the base plate 14 is bent so that it is concave with respect
to the surface where the coil 16 is to be mounted. The ends 17A and 17B of
the coil 16 are then attached to the base plate 14 with a suitable
adhesive such as an epoxy resin. The adhesive must retain the ends 18A and
18B of the coil 16 in position on the base plate 14.
After the adhesive cures to hold the coil 16 to the base plate 14, a top
plate 22 is mounted on the coil 16 as shown in FIGS. 3 and 4. Pressure is
applied to the base plate 14 and the top plate 22 to flatten the base
plate 14 and stretch the straight portions 17A and 17B of the fiber coil
16. Flattening the base plate 14 applies a bias tension to the straight
sides 17A and 17B of the coil 16. The top plate 22 may be attached to the
ends 18A and 18B of the coil 16 using an epoxy resin.
The base plate 14, the straight portions 17A and 17B of the fiber coil 16
and the top plate 22 are sufficiently flexible along the long axis of the
coil 16 so that the sensor 10 may be attached to a curved surface (not
shown) where strain is to be measured. When an external strain is applied
to the fiber optic coil 16 along its long axis, the straight portions 17A
and 17B of the fiber coil 16 change length to either shorten or lengthen,
depending upon the direction of the external strain.
Depending upon the sensitivity required, the coil 16 has about 1 to 100
turns of optical fiber. The base plate and the top plate preferably are
formed of a metal about two to one hundred centimeters long, two to three
centimeters wide and less than 200 .mu.m thick.
Referring to FIG. 5, in a strain sensing system, the optical fiber 12 is
arranged to receive an optical signal from an optical signal source 30.
When the sensor 10 is used in an array, the optical signal source 30
preferably provides means for supplying either an input "white light" beam
to the optical fiber 12. If only a single sensor is to be used, then the
optical signal source 30 may be a CW laser light source. In an array of
sensors the optical signal source 30 may be either a commercially
available superluminescent diode (not shown) or a broadband fiber source
(not shown). U.S. Pat. No. 5,142,660, issued on Aug. 25, 1992 and Ser. No.
652,534, filed Feb. 8, 1991, disclose broadband fiber sources that may be
used as the optical signal source 30. The optical signal source 30
preferably has a coherence length of approximately 100-300 .mu.m and
preferably excites both the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.11 modes in the optical
fiber 12.
The broadband fiber source may include a glass waveguide (not shown) that
has been doped with a rare-earth material that includes Er/Yb/Al. A pump
light source (not shown), which may be a high power laser diode, supplies
power to the glass waveguide. The optically pumped glass waveguide
produces output light having wavelengths in a broad bandwidth. The pump
light preferably is separated from the light by reflecting the light
having the pump light wavelength back toward the input end of the
waveguide and optically coupling the pump light from the waveguide.
The optical fiber 12 should be capable of propagating two modes of
electromagnetic energy and preferably is an elliptical-core fiber
configured to guide the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.11 modes. Such fibers are
well-known in the art. The core (not shown) of the optical fiber 12 has an
elliptical cross-section and is surrounded by a cladding (not shown)
having a refractive index lower than that of the core. The dimensions of
the core are such that the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.11 modes in the core
totally internally reflect back into the core at the core/cladding
interface.
Still referring to FIG. 5, the optical signal source 30 provides its
optical output to the optical fiber 12. The fiber 12 guides the optical
signal to a mode stripper 32. The mode stripper 32 eliminates the
LP.sub.11 mode from the optical fiber 12, leaving only LP.sub.01 mode to
propagate to the sensor 10. The mode stripper 32 may comprise a length of
the optical fiber 12 wound around a generally cylindrical mandrel or
spindle (not shown). If the diameter of the mandrel is sufficiently small,
the LP.sub.11 mode radiates into the cladding while the LP.sub.01 mode
remains guided by the optical fiber 12. The mandrel may have a diameter of
about 0.64 cm, and the optical fiber 12 may be wrapped around the mandrel
about fifteen times.
After passing through the mode stripper 32, the optical signal, which is
only in the LP.sub.01 mode, propagates to a fiber optic coupler 34, which
may be a conventional four port fiber optic coupler. The portion of the
light that remains in the optical fiber 12 after traversing the fiber
optic coupler 34 then propagates to a fiber optic modal coupler 35 formed
to couple part of the LP.sub.01 mode light in the optical fiber 12 into
the LP.sub.11 mode. Preferably the modal coupler 35 couples half of the
intensity that was in the LP.sub.01 mode into the LP.sub.11 mode. The
optical fiber 12 then guides both modes to the coil 16. This basic
structure of the modal coupler 34 is described by Blake, Kim & Shaw,
Fiber-optic modal coupler using periodic microbending, Optics Letters,
Vol. 11, No. 3, pp. 177-179, March 1986.
In an embodiment of the invention that uses the sensor 10 as a Michelson
interferometer, the free end of the optical fiber 12 has a reflective
coating 36 thereon so that both modes of the light guided by the fiber 12
reflect at the end of the optical fiber 12 and propagate back toward the
modal coupler 35. The modal coupler combines part of the reflected waves
so that they interfere. After passing through the mode coupler, the
reflected light propagates to the coupler 34. The four port coupler 34
couples part of the combined waves into an optical fiber 38, which guides
light to a detector 39. The LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.11 modes have different
propagation velocities in the fiber 12 and therefore accumulate a phase
difference as they propagate along the fiber 12. The output of the
detector is an electrical signal that is indicative of the intensity of
the interference pattern caused by the difference in propagation times of
the two modes between the modal coupler 35 and the mirror 36.
The fiber optic sensor 10 preferably comprises a length of the single
strand of elliptical core optical fiber 12. The single strand of
elliptical core optical fiber 12 functions as an interferometer because it
guides the LP.sub.01 and LP.sub.11 modes between the coupler 35 and the
mirror 36 and has different propagation constants for the two modes. The
two modes therefore have different velocities in the sensor fiber. The
relative velocities of the two modes is dependent upon the length and
refractive indices of the sensor fiber. Anything that changes either the
length or the refractive indices of the sensor causes a change in the
phase difference of the two modes. The interference pattern may be
monitored and calibrated to provide a measurement of the strain that
changed the length of the fiber.
Referring to FIG. 6, the sensor 10 may be included in a Mach-Zehnder
interferometer. Light in the LP.sub.01 mode from the mode stripper 32
propagates to a modal coupler 40 which couples half of the incident light
into the LP.sub.11 mode. The two modes then propagate through the sensor
10 and then impinge upon a modal coupler 42, which couples part of the
light in the LP.sub.11 mode into the LP.sub.01 mode. The combined waves
then interfere and form an interference pattern that may be detected with
a detector 44.
When the sensor 10 is to be included in an array, the individual lengths of
the sensor fibers are selected such that the difference in phase shift
between any pair of all sensor elements is larger than the coherence
length of the source.
The structures and methods disclosed herein illustrate the principles of
the present invention. The invention may be embodied in other specific
forms without departing from its spirit or essential characteristics. The
described embodiments are to be considered in all respects as exemplary
and illustrative rather than restrictive. Therefore, the appended claims
rather than the foregoing description define the scope of the invention.
All modifications to the embodiments described herein that come within the
meaning and range of equivalence of the claims are embraced within the
scope of the invention.
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Description  |
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