Paper
10 April 2007 High-resolution extended distance distributed fiber-optic sensing using Rayleigh backscatter
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Abstract
We describe the use of swept-wavelength interferometry for distributed fiber-optic sensing in single- and multimode optical fiber using intrinsic Rayleigh backscatter. The interrogation technique is based on measuring the spectral shift of the intrinsic Rayleigh backscatter signal along an unaltered standard telecommunications grade optical fiber and converting the spectral shift to strain or temperature. This technique shows great utility as a method for highly distributed sensing over great distances with existing, pre-installed optical fiber. Results from sensing lengths greater than 1 km of optical fiber with spatial resolutions better than 10 cm are reported.
© (2007) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Stephen T. Kreger, Dawn K. Gifford, Mark E. Froggatt, Alex K. Sang, Roger G. Duncan, Matthew S. Wolfe, and Brian J. Soller "High-resolution extended distance distributed fiber-optic sensing using Rayleigh backscatter", Proc. SPIE 6530, Sensor Systems and Networks: Phenomena, Technology, and Applications for NDE and Health Monitoring 2007, 65301R (10 April 2007); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.720913
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Cited by 46 scholarly publications and 8 patents.
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KEYWORDS
Spatial resolution

Backscatter

Multimode fibers

Optical fibers

Temperature metrology

Spectral resolution

Sensors

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