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Long-distance Φ-OTDR with a flexible frequency response based on time division multiplexing
Author(s) -
Shuai Li,
Zengguang Qin,
Zhaojun Liu,
Wenchen Yang,
Shuai Qu,
Zequn Wang,
Yanping Xu
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
optics express
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.394
H-Index - 271
ISSN - 1094-4087
DOI - 10.1364/oe.435883
Subject(s) - optical time domain reflectometer , reflectometry , frequency division multiplexing , multiplexing , frequency response , electronic engineering , computer science , distributed acoustic sensing , vibration , time domain , optics , optical fiber , orthogonal frequency division multiplexing , fiber optic sensor , acoustics , engineering , telecommunications , physics , channel (broadcasting) , fiber optic splitter , electrical engineering , computer vision
In this study, a long-distance phase-sensitive optical time domain reflectometry (Φ-OTDR) with a flexible frequency response based on time division multiplexing is proposed and experimentally demonstrated. Distributed flexible frequency vibration sensing over long distance can be realized by reconfiguring the system layout in a time-division-multiplexed manner by re-routing the Rayleigh backscattered signals for segmented processing with extra erbium-doped fiber amplifiers added only instead of any other complex signal amplification or pulse modulation mechanisms. Through time-division-multiplexed reconfiguration, the tradeoff between sensing distance and vibration frequency response in Φ-OTDR system is largely relieved. Compared with the traditional system layout, the proposed system allows a flexible frequency response in each sensing fiber segment without any crosstalk among them. In experiments, distributed vibration sensing with a frequency response up to 4.5 kHz is achieved over a sensing distance of 60km by the proposed system, which is not possible in a conventional Φ-OTDR system. Furthermore, the frequency response flexibility of the proposed system is further verified by successfully identifying a vibration event with a frequency of up to 20 kHz at the end of a 52-km-long fiber.

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