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Calibration of Distributed Temperature Sensors Using Commercially Available SMF-28 Optical Fiber From 22 °C to 1000 °C...

by Joshua Jones, Daniel C Sweeney, Anthony H Birri, Christian M Petrie, Thomas Blue
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
IEEE Sensors Journal
Publication Date
Page Numbers
4144 to 4151
Volume
22
Issue
5

Optical frequency domain reflectometry (OFDR) is a family of optical techniques which can be used to produce distributed temperature measurements from the spectral shift of an interference pattern based on the Rayleigh backscatter signature of an optical fiber. Adaptive signal processing techniques have recently been used with OFDR to record meaningful spectral shift data from commercially available SMF-28 optical fibers heated beyond 950 °C. However, a correlation between the measured spectral shift and temperature has not yet been developed at these high temperatures. To extend the measurable temperature range of OFDR in SMF-28, this work describes the development of such a correlation from room temperature (22 °C) to 1000 °C. The relationship between spectral shift and temperature change over this range was found to be best characterized by the fourth-order polynomial ΔT=(−4.241∗10−11)S4+(−2.017∗10−7)S3+(−3.677∗10−4)S2+(−0.8057)S , where ΔT represents the temperature difference compared to the reference temperature, and S represents the spectral shift measured by the fibers. The calibration developed in this work assumes that the fiber has been fully annealed by heating the fiber to 1000 °C for a few hours. This paper is the first to demonstrate the calibration and use of SMF-28 distributed optical fiber sensors up to 1000 °C, enabled using adaptive OFDR-based signal processing.