RESUMO
In recent years, the optical Vernier effect has been demonstrated as an effective tool to improve the sensitivity of optical fiber interferometer-based sensors, potentially facilitating a new generation of highly sensitive fiber sensing systems. Previous work has mainly focused on the physical implementation of Vernier-effect-based sensors using different combinations of interferometers, while the signal demodulation aspect has been neglected. However, accurate and reliable extraction of useful information from the sensing signal is critically important and determines the overall performance of the sensing system. In this Letter, we, for the first time, propose and demonstrate that machine learning (ML) can be employed for the demodulation of optical Vernier-effect-based fiber sensors. ML analysis enables direct, fast, and reliable readout of the measurand from the optical spectrum, avoiding the complicated and cumbersome data processing required in the conventional demodulation approach. This work opens new avenues for the development of Vernier-effect-based high-sensitivity optical fiber sensing systems.
RESUMO
In this paper, we report an array of fiber-optic sensors based on the Fabry-Perot interference principle and machine learning-based analyses for identifying volatile organic liquids (VOLs). Three optical fiber tip sensors with different surfaces were included in the array of sensors to improve the accuracy for identifying liquids: an intrinsic (unmodified) flat cleaved endface, a hydrophobic-coated endface, and a hydrophilic-coated endface. The time-transient responses of evaporating droplets from the optical fiber tip sensors were monitored and collected following the controlled immersion tests of 11 different organic liquids. A continuous wavelet transform was used to convert the time-transient response signal into images. These images were then utilized to train convolution neural networks for classification (identification of VOLs). We show that diversity in the information collected using the array of three sensors helps machine learning-based methods perform significantly better. We explore different pipelines for combining the information from the array of sensors within a machine learning framework and their effect on the robustness of models. The results showed that the machine learning-based methods achieved high accuracy in their classification of different liquids based on their droplet evaporation time-transient events.
RESUMO
We proposed an extremely simple fiber-optic tip sensor system to identify liquids by combining their corresponding droplet evaporation events with analyses using machine learning techniques. Pendant liquid droplets were suspended from the cleaved endface of a single-mode fiber during the experiment. The optical fiber-droplet interface and the droplet-air interface served as two partial reflectors of an extrinsic Fabry-Perot interferometer (EFPI) with a liquid droplet cavity. As the liquid pendant droplet evaporated, its length diminished. A light source can be used to observe the effective change in the net reflectivity of the optical fiber sensor system by observing the resulting optical interference phenomenon of the reflected waves. Using a single-wavelength probing light source, the entire evaporation event of the liquid droplet was precisely captured. The measured time transient response from the fiber-optic tip sensor to an evaporation event of a liquid droplet of interest was then transformed into image data using a continuous wavelet transform. The obtained image data was used to fine-tune pre-trained convolution neural networks (CNNs) for the given task. The results demonstrated that machine learning-based classification methods achieved greater than 98% accuracy in classifying different liquids based on their corresponding droplet evaporation processes, measured by the fiber-optic tip sensor.