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| United States Patent | 5430815 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/5430815.html |
| Inventor(s) | Shen; Nelson M. (Palo Alto, CA);
Horsma; David A. (Palo Alto, CA);
Moisson; Marc F. (Leuven, BE);
Kulkarni; Narendra (Sunnyvale, CA) |
| Abstract | An optical fiber water sensor includes a mandrel having a convex or concave
shape adjacent to an optical fiber which is adjacent to a water swellable
material held in a reservoir. Upon coming in contact with water, the
material swells and deforms a section of the optical fiber about a contour
defined by the mandrel thus attenuating a signal propagating through the
fiber which is detected by an optical detector to indicate the presence of
water. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 5430815 |
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Optical fiber water sensor |
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| Publication Date |
July 4, 1995 |
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| Filing Date |
February 5, 1993 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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U.S. References |
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| | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | 5262640 Purvis 250/227.25 Nov,1993 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5243670 Bonicel 385/13 Sep,1993 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5222165 Bohlinger 385/16 Jun,1993 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5193129 Kramer
Mar,1993 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5157752 Greveling 385/112 Oct,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5138152 Botting 250/227.16 Aug,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 5082719 Arroyo
Jan,1992 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4926165 Lahlouh 340/603 May,1990 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4918305 Wlodarczyk 250/227.14 Apr,1990 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4891511 Reed 250/227.16 Jan,1990 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4812014 Sawano 385/13 Mar,1989 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4750796 Shibata 385/13 Jun,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4729630 Martinez 385/13 Mar,1988 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4637729 Schoch 356/410 Jan,1987 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4634856 Kirkham 250/227.25 Jan,1987 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4443700 Macedo 250/227.16 Apr,1984 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4221962 Black 250/227.25 Sep,1980 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4159420 Tsunoda 250/227.25 Jun,1979 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | |
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| Market Size |
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| Reasonable Royalty |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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What is claimed is:
1. An optical fiber water sensor, comprising:
a substrate having a curved mandrel formed on a side thereof;
an optical fiber disposed adjacent the mandrel and being oriented such that
it can be deflected around a curved contour of the mandrel upon being
urged toward the mandrel;
a liquid swellable material disposed adjacent the optical fiber and
oriented such that upon coming in contact with a liquid the material
swells and urges the optical fiber around the curved contour, the curved
contour having a radius of curvature smaller than a minimum bend radius of
the fiber, wherein the minimum bend radius is less than 7 millimeters, the
fiber being bent about a sector angle greater than 30.degree., and the
liquid swellable material when saturated introduces a loss in the optical
fiber which is less than 1.25 db.
2. The sensor of claim 1, further comprising a second substrate having a
reservoir therein which contains the liquid swellable material.
3. The sensor of claim 1, the curved mandrel having a convex shape.
4. The sensor of claim 1, the curved mandrel having a concave shape.
5. The sensor of claim 1, the swellable material comprising a rubber or a
gel which swells upon exposure to water.
6. An optical fiber water sensor, consisting essentially of: a substrate
having a curved mandrel formed on a side thereof;
an optical fiber disposed adjacent the mandrel and being oriented such that
it can be deflected around a curved contour of the mandrel upon being
urged toward the mandrel;
a liquid swellable material disposed adjacent the optical fiber and
oriented such that upon coming in contact with a liquid the material
swells and urges the optical fiber around the curved contour, the curved
contour having a radius of curvature smaller than a minimum bend radius of
the fiber, wherein the minimum bend radius is less than 7 millimeters, the
fiber being bent about a sector angle greater than 30.degree., and the
liquid swellable material when saturated introduces a loss in the optical
fiber which is less than 1.25 db.
7. The sensor of claim 6, further comprising a second substrate having a
reservoir therein which contains the liquid swellable material.
8. The sensor of claim 6, the curved mandrel having a convex shape.
9. The sensor of claim 8 wherein the optical fiber is adjacent the curved
convex shaped mandrel and the liquid swellable material.
10. The sensor of claim 6, the curved mandrel having a concave shape.
11. The sensor of claim 6, the swellable material comprising a rubber or a
gel which swells upon exposure to water.
12. An optical fiber water sensor, comprising:
a substrate having a curved mandrel formed on a side thereof;
an optical fiber disposed adjacent the mandrel and being oriented such that
it can be deflected around a curved contour of the mandrel upon being
urged toward the mandrel;
a liquid swellable material disposed adjacent and along a length of the
optical fiber and oriented such that upon coming in contact with a liquid
the material swells and urges the optical fiber around the curved contour,
the curved contour having a radius of curvature smaller than a minimum
bend radius of the fiber, wherein the minimum bend radius is less than 7
millimeters, the fiber being bent about a sector angle greater than
30.degree., and the liquid swellable material when saturated introduces a
loss in the optical fiber which is less than 1.25 db.
13. The sensor of claim 12, further comprising a second substrate having a
reservoir therein which contains the liquid swellable material.
14. The sensor of claim 12, the curved mandrel having a convex shape.
15. The sensor of claim 14 wherein the optical fiber is adjacent the curved
convex shaped mandrel and the liquid swellable material.
16. The sensor of claim 12, the curved mandrel having a concave shape.
17. The sensor of claim 3 wherein the optical fiber is adjacent the curved
convex shaped mandrel and the liquid swellable material. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to optical fiber sensors for detecting
liquids.
Various optical fiber water sensors have been proposed in the prior art.
Sawano et al. "Optical fiber cable with submersion sensor fiber",
International Wire & Cable Symposium Proceedings 1987, p. 284, discloses
an optical fiber water sensor whereby a water swellable material is
disposed in a cavity adjacent a piston which confronts an optical fiber
which in turn confronts a concave mandrel. Upon being exposed to water,
the water swellable material swells, which urges the piston against the
fiber and causes the fiber to assume a shape of the concave mandrel. This
sensor is disadvantages since it is relatively complicated in design and
hence expensive.
Sawano et al. further describe an optical fiber sensor whereby an optical
fiber is helically wrapped about a rod composed of a water swellable
material, with a stiff yarn being counter-helically wound around the rod.
Upon coming in contact with water, the water swellable material swells and
causes the optical fiber to bend at a plurality of points about the stiff
counter-helically wound yarn. A yarn sensor merely produces a loss over a
length of the yarn, rather than at a discrete point. Hence a loss trace of
an OTDR looks like a high attenuation fiber instead of a step loss such as
a splice and produces poor resolution. In addition, this sensor again is
relatively complicated in design, takes up a relatively large amount of
space, and hence is inconvenient to deploy.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to eliminate the
above-noted drawbacks of prior art sensors and to provide an optical fiber
water sensor which is relatively simple in design, inexpensive to produce,
and is relatively compact in size so as to allow the sensor to be deployed
in environments where space is at a premium, such as optical fiber
closures in telecommunication outside plant environments.
These and other objects of the invention are achieved by an optical fiber
water sensor, comprising:
a substrate having a curved mandrel formed on a side thereof;
an optical fiber disposed adjacent the mandrel and being oriented such that
it can be deflected around a curved contour of the mandrel upon being
urged toward the mandrel;
a liquid swellable material disposed adjacent the optical fiber and
oriented such that upon coming in contact with a liquid the material
swells and urges the optical fiber around the curved contour, the curved
contour having a radius of curvature smaller than a minimum bend radius of
the fiber.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING(S)
FIG 1 illustrates a first preferred embodiment of an optical fiber water
sensor according to the present invention;
FIG. 2 illustrates the sensor of FIG I after exposure to water;
FIG. 3 illustrates an alternative preferred embodiment of the invention.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
FIG 1 illustrates a first preferred embodiment of the invention. Referring
to this figure, an optical fiber water sensor I comprises a substrate 2
having a convex shaped mandrel 3 on one end thereof. The convex mandrel
has a minimum radius of curvature which is less than a minimum bend radius
for optical fiber 4 such that upon bending a portion of the optical fiber
4 about the convex mandrel 3 attenuation to a signal propagating in the
optical fiber 4 results. The attenuation is detectable by any convenient
means, such as a photodetector or optical time domain reflectometer
(OTDR). The sensor 1 further includes a second substrate 5 having a
reservoir 7 therein which contains a material 6 which swells when exposed
to a liquid. The liquid or water swellable material can comprise a gel,
rubber, or polymer, as desired. Examples of swellable materials well known
in the art, and are specifically disclosed in Lahlouh et al. U.S. Pat. No.
4,926,165; Greveling et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,157,752; and Arroyo U.S. Pat.
No. 5,082,719, the disclosures of which are all incorporated herein by
reference. Preferably, the water swellable material should be made of a
material which is induction free, provides sufficient expandability to
allow measurement by an OTDR when several sensors are cascaded together,
is of a type that expands regardless of the kind of water or liquid
present, and which operates over a broad temperature range, such as
-40.degree. C. to +60.degree. C. A sector angle formed when the water
swellable material is fully saturated is preferably greater than
15.degree., 20.degree., 25.degree., 30.degree., 35.degree., 40.degree.,
45.degree., 60.degree., 90.degree., 180.degree., and higher depending on
the sector angle chosen and total attenuation desired. The substrates 2, 5
can be made of any desired material, such as plastic, and can be secured
together by screws, clamps, adhesive, etc. The minimum bend radius defined
by the convex mandrel should be less than the minimum bend radius of the
fiber. For single mode glass-on-glass fiber, a minimum bend radius of the
mandrel optionally should be less than 15 mm, 12 mm, 10 mm, 9 mm, 7 mm, 6
mm, 5 mm, or 4 mm.
Upon exposing the water swellable material to water, it swells and urges
the fiber 4 to assume a shape of the convex mandrel 3, as illustrated in
FIG. 2. Since the fiber 4 is bent about a radius of curvature smaller than
its minimum bend radius, an attenuation to a signal propagating in the
optical fiber results which is readily detectable by any detection means.
FIG. 3 illustrates an alternative embodiment of the invention whereby the
substrate 2 is replaced by substrate 12 having a concave shaped mandrel 13
on one side thereof, with another substrate 15 containing the water
swellable material 6. Upon the water swellable material 6 coming in
contact with water and expanding, the optical fiber 4 is bent about a
shape defined by the concave mandrel 13. The embodiment of FIG. 3 works
well but has a slightly slower response time than the FIG 1 embodiment
since at the beginning of swelling the fiber bends about a relatively
large bend radius as compared to that initially encountered in FIGS. 1, 2.
A preferred use for the sensor embodiments described are for inclusion in
an outside plant optical fiber closure or optical fiber optical network
unit.
Table 1 contains test results measured for three sensors constructed
according to the present invention and cascaded on an optical fiber, with
sensor 3 being closest to an OTDR and sensor 1 being furthermost from the
OTDR. All three sensors utilized a convex mandrel having a minimum bend
radius of 0.25 inches (6.35 mm) shaped to induce a bend about a sector
angle of about 45.degree. for a single mode glass-on-glass fiber. The
water swellable material used in each sensor was Aquaquell Seal Tape 7V
obtainable from Sumitoma Corporation, the material being a blend of
styrene butadiene rubber, sodium acrylate-vinyl alcohol, and chloroprene
rubber.
TABLE 1
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Sensor 1 Sensor 2 Sensor 3
Time after insertion insertion
insertion
immersed in water
loss (dB) loss (dB)
loss (dB)
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Start 0 0 0
15 minutes 0 0 .28
50 minutes .4 .24 .35
1 hour 25 minutes
.4 .38 .44
2 hours .43 .46 .55
2 hours 50 minutes
.49 .48 .65
18 hours .86 1.12 .84
24 hours .93 1.11 .91
92 hours 1.07 1.26 1.1
116 hours .928 1.14 1.07
124 hours 1.3 1.16 1.05
141 hours 1.28 1.12 1.04
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As can be seen from the table, the sensors constructed and tested take less
than one hour to develop detectable signals and take about a full day to
be fully saturated. Preferably, the loss induced by each sensor is
designed to be about 1 dB when the sensor is fully saturated. A reason to
limit the loss to 1 dB is to allow a cascade arrangement of multiple
sensors to be monitored simultaneously. Accordingly, according to a
preferred feature of the invention, the sensors are constructed so as to
create a total loss in a fiber which does not exceed 1.5 dB, 1.25 dB, 1.15
dB, and optimally 1.0 dB.
Though the invention has been described by reference to certain preferred
embodiments, the invention is not to be limited thereby and only by the
appended claims.
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