Optical-Fiber Infrasound Sensors

Features include directionality and relatively flat frequency response.

Optical-fiber infrasound sensors (OFISs) are being developed for detecting acoustic pressures in the frequency range from a few millihertz to a few hertz. As explained below, these sensors were conceived to overcome some of the limitations of prior infrasound sensors based on pipe filters connected to microbarographs.

Figure 1. An OFIS includes a fiber-optic Mach-Zehnder interferometer that measures acoustic strain in a sealed hose. The length and diameter of the hose are not critical and can be chosen according to considerations of sensitivity, directionality, and suppression of noise. In one prototype OFIS, the hose is 2.5 cm in diameter and 89 m long.
An OFIS includes a sealed hose and a fiber-optic Mach-Zehnder interferometer that is sensitive to acoustically induced fluctuations in strain in the hose. The OFIS (see Figure 1) includes two optical fibers wrapped around and along the hose in slight tension in two spiral patterns having equal pitch. Both fibers are doubled back on themselves, but with different spacings, so that the two fibers undergo different amounts of strain when the hose expands or contracts in response to changing air pressure. Light from a laser is coupled into both fibers via a fiber-optic splitter and a piezoelectric modulator, which is excited at a suitable frequency. After traveling along the optical fibers, the laser beams are coupled out via another fiber-optic splitter and fed to a photodetector, wherein the beams interfere. The output of the photodetector is demodulated by a lock-in amplifier synchronized with the modulator excitation. The output of the lock-in amplifier consists of two interference signals in quadrature. These signals are sampled at a suitable rate (e.g., 200 Hz) and the samples are processed to obtain the strain-fluctuation signal and, hence, the desired acoustic-pressure signal.

The principal source of acoustic noise in the infrasound frequency range is wind turbulence. In a typical prior infrasound sensor based on a pipe filter connected to a microbarograph, the sound is summed acoustically from multiple locations connected to the microbarograph via the pipe filter in order to obtain an averaging or smoothing effect that suppresses the relative contribution of noise. Unfortunately, the acoustic sum is not a true average and is affected by the frequency response of the pipe filter, which response is not flat across the entire infrasound frequency band and can be determined only with extreme difficulty. In contrast, the response of an OFIS depends on the optical response of the fiber but is substantially independent of the acoustic frequency.

Figure 2. The Directionality of an OFIS increases with length, as illustrated by four example polar plots of relative amplitude (represented by radius) versus angle of incidence (¸ represented by azimuthal angle).
Relative to the output of a microbarograph connected via a pipe filter to multiple sampling locations, the response of the OFIS is a much closer approximation to a true spatial average of acoustic pressure because it is proportional to the integral of strain (and, hence, to the integral of acoustic pressure) along the hose. Another advantageous feature of integration of acoustic pressure along the hose is that the response is directional and can be made more so by simply increasing the length: It can be shown that if the hose is N acoustic wavelengths long at a frequency of interest and the direction of incidence of a wave having that frequency is such that the wavefronts lie at an angle θ with respect to the longitudinal axis of the hose, then the relative amplitude of the integratedpressure signal is given by

A(θ) = sin[Nπcos(ı)]/Nπcos(θ).

As illustrated by a few examples in Figure 2, this response peaks at broadside incidence (θ = 90°) and becomes more sharply peaked as N increases.

This work was done by Mark A. Zumberge and Jonathan Berger of the University of California for the Defense Threat Reduction Agency. For more information, download the Technical Support Package (free white paper) at www.defensetechbriefs.com/tsp  under the Photonics category. DTRA-0001



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Optical-Fiber Infrasound Sensors

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