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1.
Sensors (Basel) ; 24(16)2024 Aug 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39205125

RESUMO

In this review, we summarize the latest advances in the design of optical frequency-domain reflectometers (OFDRs), digital signal processing, and sensors based on special optical fibers. We discuss state-of-the-art approaches to improving metrological characteristics, such as spatial resolution, SNR, dynamic range, and the accuracy of determining back reflection coefficients. We also analyze the latest achievements in the OFDR-based sensors: the accuracy of spatial localization of the impact, the error in detecting temperatures, deformation, and other quantities, and the features of separate measurement of various physical quantities. We also pay attention to the trend of mutual integration of frequency-domain optical reflectometry methods with time-domain optical reflectometry, which provides completely new sensing possibilities. We believe that this review may be useful to engineers and scientists focused on developing a lab setup, complete measurement instrument, or sensing system with specific requirements.

2.
Sensors (Basel) ; 22(3)2022 Jan 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35161779

RESUMO

This work presents a detailed review of the development of distributed acoustic sensors (DAS) and their newest scientific applications. It covers most areas of human activities, such as the engineering, material, and humanitarian sciences, geophysics, culture, biology, and applied mechanics. It also provides the theoretical basis for most well-known DAS techniques and unveils the features that characterize each particular group of applications. After providing a summary of research achievements, the paper develops an initial perspective of the future work and determines the most promising DAS technologies that should be improved.


Assuntos
Acústica , Tecnologia de Fibra Óptica , Humanos
3.
Sensors (Basel) ; 21(20)2021 Oct 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34696075

RESUMO

Self-injection locking to an external fiber cavity is an efficient technique enabling drastic linewidth narrowing of semiconductor lasers. Recently, we constructed a simple dual-frequency laser source that employs self-injection locking of a DFB laser in the external ring fiber cavity and Brillouin lasing in the same cavity. The laser performance characteristics are on the level of the laser modules commonly used with BOTDA. The use of a laser source operating two frequencies strongly locked through the Brillouin resonance simplifies the BOTDA system, avoiding the use of a broadband electrooptical modulator (EOM) and high-frequency electronics. Here, in a direct comparison with the commercial BOTDA, we explore the capacity of our low-cost solution for BOTDA sensing, demonstrating distributed measurements of the Brillouin frequency shift in a 10 km sensing fiber with a 1.5 m spatial resolution.

4.
Opt Express ; 28(25): 37322-37333, 2020 Dec 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33379569

RESUMO

Low-noise lasers are a powerful tool in precision spectroscopy, displacement measurements, and development of advanced optical atomic clocks. While all applications benefit from lower frequency noise and robust design, some of them also require lasing at two frequencies. Here, we introduce a simple dual-frequency laser leveraging a ring fiber cavity exploited both for self-injection locking of a standard semiconductor distributed feedback (DFB) laser and for generation of Stokes light via stimulated Brillouin scattering. In contrast to the previous laser configurations, the system is supplied by a low-bandwidth active optoelectronic feedback. Importantly, continuous operation of two mutually locked frequencies is provided by self-injection locking, while the active feedback loop is used just to support this regime. The fiber configuration reduces the natural Lorentzian linewidth of light emitted by the laser at pump and Stokes frequencies down to 270 Hz and 110 Hz, respectively, and features a stable 300-Hz-width RF spectrum recorded with beating of two laser outputs. Translating the proposed laser design to integrated photonics will dramatically reduce cost and footprint for many laser applications such as ultra-high capacity fiber and data center networks, atomic clocks, and microwave photonics.

5.
Opt Express ; 28(1): 478-484, 2020 Jan 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32118973

RESUMO

Self-injection locking to an external fiber cavity is an efficient technique enabling drastic linewidth narrowing and self-stabilization of semiconductor lasers. The main drawback of this technique is its high sensitivity to fluctuations of the configuration parameters and surroundings. In the proposed laser configuration, to the best our knowledge, for the first time the self-injection locking mechanism is used in conjunction with a simple active optoelectronic feedback, ensuring stable mode-hopping free laser operation in a single longitudinal mode. Locking to 4-m length fiber resonator causes a drastic narrowing of the DFB laser linewidth down to 2.8 kHz and a reduction of the laser phase noise by three orders of magnitude. We have explored key features of the laser dynamics with and without active feedback, revealing stability and tunability of the laser linewidth as an additional benefit of the proposed technique.

6.
Sci Rep ; 7: 44194, 2017 03 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28281677

RESUMO

Mode-locked fibre laser as a dissipative system is characterized by rich forms of soliton interaction, which take place via internal energy exchange through noisy background in the presence of dispersion and nonlinearity. The result of soliton interaction was either stationary-localized or chaotically-oscillated soliton complexes, which have been shown before as stand-alone in the cavity. Here we report on a new form of solitons complex observed in Bi-doped mode-locked fibre laser operated at 1450 nm. The solitons are arranged in two different group types contemporizing in the cavity: one pulse group propagates as bound solitons with fixed phase relation and interpulse position eventuated in 30 dB spectrum modulation depth; while the other pulses form a bunch with continuously and chaotically moving solitons. The article describes both experimental and theoretical considerations of this effect.

7.
Opt Express ; 22(2): 1896-905, 2014 Jan 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24515198

RESUMO

The effect of cavity dispersion on the dynamics of bound soliton states in a fiber laser has been studied both experimentally and numerically. The mode-locking mechanism in a laser was provided by the frequency-shifted feedback to avoid the influence of soliton attraction that could be induced by saturable absorption. It was found that phase-locked bound solitons are stable for dispersion below the "threshold" value of 0.2 ps/nm which depends on the other cavity parameters. For higher dispersion the bound states collapse resulting in the multiple weakly-interacting soliton regime, circulating randomly within the cavity.

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