JoVE Logo

Zaloguj się

Aby wyświetlić tę treść, wymagana jest subskrypcja JoVE. Zaloguj się lub rozpocznij bezpłatny okres próbny.

W tym Artykule

  • Podsumowanie
  • Streszczenie
  • Wprowadzenie
  • Protokół
  • Wyniki
  • Dyskusje
  • Ujawnienia
  • Podziękowania
  • Materiały
  • Odniesienia
  • Przedruki i uprawnienia

Podsumowanie

A protocol to create a full-range linear displacement sensor, combining two packaged fiber Bragg grating detectors with a magnetic scale, is presented.

Streszczenie

Long-distance displacement measurements using optical fibers have always been a challenge in both basic research and industrial production. We developed and characterized a temperature-independent fiber Bragg grating (FBG)-based random-displacement sensor that adopts a magnetic scale as a novel transferring mechanism. By detecting shifts of two FBG center wavelengths, a full-range measurement can be obtained with a magnetic scale. For identification of the clockwise and counterclockwise rotation direction of the motor (in fact, the direction of movement of the object to be tested), there is a sinusoidal relationship between the displacement and the center wavelength shift of the FBG; as the anticlockwise rotation alternates, the center wavelength shift of the second FBG detector shows a leading phase difference of around 90° (+90°). As the clockwise rotation alternates, the center wavelength shift of the second FBG displays a lagging phase difference of around 90° (-90°). At the same time, the two FBG-based sensors are temperature independent. If there is some need for a remote monitor without any electromagnetic interference, this striking approach makes them a useful tool for determining the random displacement. This methodology is appropriate for industrial production. As the structure of the whole system is relatively simple, this displacement sensor can be used in commercial production. In addition to it being a displacement sensor, it can be used to measure other parameters, such as velocity and acceleration.

Wprowadzenie

Optical fiber-based sensors have great advantages, such as flexibility, wavelength division multiplexing, remote monitoring, corrosion resistance, and other characteristics. Thus, the optical fiber displacement sensor has broad applications.

To realize targeted linear displacement measurements in complex environments, various structures of the optical fiber (e.g., the Michelson interferometer1, the Fabry-Perot cavity interferometer2, the fiber Bragg grating3, the bending loss4) have been developed over recent years. The bending loss requires the light source in a stable station and is unsuitable for environmental vibration. Qu et al. have designed an interferometric fiber-optic nanodisplacement sensor based on a plastic dual-core fiber with one end coated with a silver mirror; it has a resolution of 70 nm5. A simple displacement sensor based on a bent single-mode-multimode-single-mode (SMS) fiber structure was proposed to overcome the limitations on the measurement of the displacement range; it increased the displacement sensitivity threefold with a range from 0 to 520 µm6. Lin et al. presented a displacement sensor system that combines the FBG together with a spring; the output power is approximately linear with the displacement of 110-140 mm7. A fiber Fabry-Perot displacement sensor has a measurement range of 0-0.5 mm with a linearity of 1.1% and a resolution of 3 µm8. Zhou et al. reported a wide-range displacement sensor based on a fiber-optic Fabry-Perot interferometer for subnanometer measurements, up to 0.084 nm over a dynamic range of 3 mm9. A fiber-optic displacement sensor based on reflective intensity modulated technology was demonstrated using a fiber collimator; this had a sensing range over 30 cm10. Although optical fibers can be fabricated into many kinds of displacement sensors, these fiber-based sensors generally make use of the tensile limit of the material itself, which limits their application in wide-range measurements. Thus, compromises are usually made between the measurement range and sensitivity. Moreover, it is difficult to determine the displacement as various variables occur simultaneously; especially, cross-sensitivity of the strain and temperature could damage the experimental precision. There are many discrimination techniques reported in the literature, such as using two different sensing structures, using a single FBG half-bonded by different glues, or using special optical fibers. Thus, the further development of optical fiber displacement sensors requires high sensitivity, a small size, great stability, full range, and temperature independence.

Here, the periodic structure of the magnetic scale makes a full-range measurement possible. A random displacement without a limited measurement range with a magnetic scale is achieved. Combined with two FBGs, both temperaturecross-sensitivity and the identification for the direction of movement could be solved. Various steps within this method require precision and attention to detail. The protocol of the sensor fabrication is described in detail as following.

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Protokół

1. Fabrication of the fiber Bragg grating

  1. To enhance the photosensitivity of fiber core, put a standard single-mode fiber into a hydrogen-loaded airtight canister for 1 week.
  2. Fabricate the fiber Bragg grating using the scanning phase-mask technique and a frequency-doubled, continuous wave argon-ion laser at a wavelength of 244 nm.
    1. Focus on the optical fiber with a cylindrical lens and an ultraviolet (UV) laser beam. Imprint the grating (periodic modulation of refractive index) in the photosensitive core by using a phase mask (parallel with the fiber axis) placed in front of the fiber. The light output by the laser is shaped and perpendicular to the phase mask. Place the fiber at the position of the ±1 order diffracted light for UV exposure.
  3. After UV inscription, place the two fiber Bragg gratings in a 100 °C oven for 48 h to remove any residual hydrogen, until the reflectivity of the fiber grating is reduced by 10%, the 3 dB bandwidth is reduced by 0.1 nm, and the center wavelength is shifted by 0.8 nm. This step is called the annealing processing. The parameters of FBG will not change after the annealing processing.
    NOTE: The central wavelengths of these two FBGs are 1,555.12 nm (1#FBG) and 1,557.29 nm (2#FBG) with grating lengths of 5 mm.

2. Preparation of the magnetic scale and the matching clamp

  1. Determine the size of the permanent magnet according to the previously described design8. The description of the permanent magnet is shown in Table 1.
  2. Design the slot of the magnetic scale, whose dimension matches the permanent magnet, as shown in Figure 1.
    1. Confirm the dimension of the matching clamp and set a distance of 22.5 mm between the two slots in the clamp. In order to remove magnetic field interference, the clamp is made of stainless steel.
    2. Set a distance of 10 mm of the pitch in the magnetic scale (τ) to distinguish the direction of movement, and set a distance of 22.5 mm ((2+1/4)·τ) between the two detectors. Two detectors can obtain the displacement characteristic according to the following formulas, which can achieve sinusoidal function variations by a phase difference of 90°, where x is the displacement, F1#FBG and F2#FBG are the magnetic force of the two detectors, and B is a constant. The structure of the magnetic scale and its matching clamp are shown in Figure 1.
      figure-protocol-2684
  3. Put permanent magnets into the slots of the clamp, with the magnetic N/S alternately arranged. Cylindrical permanent magnets are only magnetized in the axial direction, and its magnetic vector is 750 kA/m.

3. Fabrication of the displacement sensor

  1. Prepare a mixture of heat-curable fiber optic epoxy (glue) by adding 100 mg of hardener (Component A) to 200 mg of resin (Component B), as shown in Figure 2.
  2. Measure the distance of fiber pigtail, approximately 10 mm between the end face of fiber pigtail and the grating region, and then, score it with a fine-point marker.
  3. Use a fiber optic stripper to peel the fiber coating and strip it from the marker position of the previous step.
  4. Clean the surface of any remaining polymer with dust-free paper. Position the blade of a high-precision fiber cleaver perpendicular to the fiber optic cable and cut it.
  5. Put a permanent magnet on the hot plate and place a spring with a length of 15 mm above the permanent magnet.
    NOTE: The length of the spring is the main element of the preloaded force in the next step.
  6. Glue the fiber obtained from step 3.3. Place the pigtail of the fiber inside of the spring, as shown in Figure 2, and cure the adhesive (Epoxy #1) for 30 min at 150 °C.
    NOTE: These three combined parts are called 1#P.
  7. Put 1#P into the tapered pipe and use adhesive tape to fix the permanent magnet. as shown in Figure 3. Place adhesive exactly above the permanent magnet, and cure the adhesive (Epoxy #2 is the same as Epoxy #1) for 30 min at a temperature of 150 °C. Then, apply the preloaded force by hand to the fiber Bragg grating; the pretightening force allows the fiber to be in a nonbending state.
    NOTE: These combined parts are called the FBG detector. The FBG detector is responsible for converting the signal of the magnetic force into the signal of the displacement parameters.
  8. Remove the adhesive tape; the production of this step is called 2#P.
  9. Splice an APC-type single-mode connector to the end of the 2#P fiber using a fusion splicer, following manufacturer’s instructions.
  10. Fix two FBG detectors into the slot of the clamp, and then, fix the clamp to the displacement platform.

4. Building the testing system

  1. Power the high-speed wavelength interrogator with the built-in optical switch.
  2. Turn on the amplified spontaneous emission (ASE). Guide the light into the input-output fiber and propagate it to the FBG-based displacement sensor. Then, the reflection spectra modulated by the sensor reflects it to the interrogator via the input-output fiber again.
  3. Connect the interrogator to the computer with an ethernet cable, based on the UDP protocol.
  4. Connect the optical circulator to the optical spectrum analyzer (OSA) with a minimum resolution of 0.02 nm, for monitoring the Bragg wavelength shift.
  5. Power the stepper motor with 24 V.
  6. Change the speed of the motor by adjusting the DIP switch of the stepper motor controller. With the external control port, the stepper motor controller can be driven in half-step, normal, and other drive modes, as shown in Table 2, and on-chip PWM chopper circuits permit switch-mode control of the current in the windings based on an MCU.
  7. Adjust the distance between the two detectors and the magnetic scale.
    1. Adjust until there is a better sinusoidal curve between the displacement and the magnetic field.
    2. Adjust until there are well-described methods to stimulate the best distance11 because cylindrical permanent magnets with opposite magnetic fields are arranged adjacent to each other.
      NOTE: There is a sinusoidal relationship between the displacement and the magnetic field when there is a suitable distance between the magnetic scale and the detector. The magnetic force has a linear relationship with the magnetic field. According to Hooke’s law, force has a linear relationship with strain, and the center wavelength shift of FBG is linear with strain applied on the FBG; thus, a sinusoidal curve can be obtained.
    3. Separate the two detectors from each other for 22.5 mm.
      NOTE: (m ± 1/4)τ equals 22.5 mm (m is a positive integer, m = 2), τ is the pitch of the magnetic scale, and (m ± 1/4)τ ≤ the total length of the magnetic scale, where τ equals 10.

5. Evaluation of the designed displacement sensor

  1. Adjust the distance between the detector and the magnetic scale to be 1.5 mm and, then, fix the clamp.
  2. Plug the APC-type connector end of the sensor into the interrogator port and start the configuration software. Set the sampling frequency of the interrogator to 5 kHz for a real-time recording of the FBG center wavelength change over time. Push the button to control the motor by an increment of 40 μm each time (type F, as shown in Table 2). Different types represent different steps. If the motor works with type F, the motor can have the smallest step interval and the highest displacement accuracy.
  3. Plug the APC-type connector end of the sensor into the OSA port and start the configuration software. An OSA and interrogator monitor the central wavelengths shift of FBGs. Save the data from the static state calibration.
  4. Alternate the clockwise and anticlockwise rotation of the motor in a dynamic state. Save the data as above.
  5. Put the sensor on the hot plate and conduct a temperature calibration experiment. Change the temperature of the hot plate from 25 °C to 90 °C.
  6. Perform data analysis.
    1. Import the data in a .csv format from the static calibration experiment into MATLAB. Employ the findpeaks function to extract the center wavelength of the fiber Bragg grating. Use the sinusoidal function from the curve fitting tool to fit the relationship between the center wavelength and the displacement, as shown in Figure 5a. The fitting residual errors between sample points and the fitting curve also are depicted in Figure 5b. The two Fourier fitting curves between the center wavelength shifts and the linear displacement despite the original phase are here:
      figure-protocol-9512
    2. Import the data into the processing software. Using the curve fitting tool, process the data obtained from a dynamic clockwise rotation (forward movement) and an anticlockwise rotation (backward movement) of the motor (Figure 6).
    3. Process the data obtained from the temperature calibration experiment as above (Figure 7).

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Wyniki

The distance, ranging from 1 mm to 3 mm11, between the magnetic scale and the detector enabled the detection of the linear displacement with a sinusoidal function. A distance of 22.5 mm between two detectors enabled this approach to realize detection of the direction of an object's movement with a phase difference of 90°. The two detectors were separated from each other for (m ± 1/4)τ (m is a positive integer) and (m &#...

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Dyskusje

We have demonstrated a new method for random linear displacement measurements by combining a magnetic scale and two fiber Bragg gratings. The main advantage of these sensors is random displacement without limitation. The magnetic scale used here generated a periodicity of the magnetic field at 10 mm, far beyond the practical limits of conventional optical fiber displacement sensors, such as the displacement mentioned by Lin et al.7 and Li et al.8. The temperature-dependent ...

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Ujawnienia

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Podziękowania

The authors thank the Optics Laboratory for their equipment and are thankful for financial support through the Program for Changjiang Scholars and Innovative Research Team in University and the Ministry of Education of China.

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Materiały

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
ASEOPtoElectronics Technology Co., Ltd.1525nm-1610nm
computerThinkpadwin10
fiber cleaver/ CT-32Fujikurathe diameter of 125
fiber optic epoxy /DP420henkel-loctiteRatio 2:1
interrogatorBISTUsample rate:17kHz
motor driverZolixPSMX25
optical circulatorThorlabthree ports
optical coupleThorlab50:50
optical spectrum analyzer/OSAFujikuraAQ6370D
permanent magnetShanghai Sichi Magnetic Industry Co., Ltd.D5x4mm
plastic shaped pipeTopphotonics
power sourceRIGOLadjustable power
single mode fiberCorning9/125um
SpringtengluowujinD3x15mm
stepper motor controllerJF24D03M

Odniesienia

  1. Salcedadelgado, G., et al. Adaptable Optical Fiber Displacement-Curvature Sensor Based on a Modal Michelson Interferometer with a Tapered Single Mode Fiber. Sensors. 17 (6), 1259(2017).
  2. Milewska, D., Karpienko, K., Jędrzejewska-Szczerska, M. Application of thin diamond films in low-coherence fiber-optic Fabry Pérot displacement sensor. Diamond and Related Materials. 64, 169-176 (2016).
  3. Zou, Y., Dong, X., Lin, G., Adhami, R. Wide Range FBG Displacement Sensor Based on Twin-Core Fiber Filter. Journal of Lightwave Technology. 30 (3), 337-343 (2012).
  4. Zhao, J., Bao, T., Kundu, T. Wide Range Fiber Displacement Sensor Based on Bending Loss. Journal of Sensors. 2016 (2016-1-27), 1-5 (2016).
  5. Qu, H., Yan, G., Skorobogatiy, M. Interferometric fiber-optic bending/nano-displacement sensor using plastic dual-core fiber. Optics Letters. 39 (16), 4835-4838 (2014).
  6. Wu, Q., Semenova, Y., Wang, P., Muhamad Hatta, A., Farrell, G. Experimental demonstration of a simple displacement sensor based on a bent single-mode-multimode-single-mode fiber structure. Measurement Science & Technology. 22 (2), 025203(2011).
  7. Lin, G., Adhami, R., Dong, X., Zou, Y. Wide range FBG displacement sensor based on twin-core fiber filter. Journal of Lightwave Technology. 30 (3), 337-343 (2012).
  8. Li, M., Guo, J., Tong, B. A double-fiber F-P displacement sensor based on direct phase demodulation. The International Conference on Optical Fibre Sensors. 8421, 84212R(2012).
  9. Zhou, X., Yu, Q. Wide-range displacement sensor based on fiber-Optic Fabry-Perot Interferometer for Subnanometer Measurement. IEEE Sensors Journal. 11, 1602-1606 (2011).
  10. Shen, W., Wu, X., Meng, H., Huang, X. Long distance fiber-optic displacement sensor based on fiber collimator. Review of Scientific Instruments. 81 (12), 123104-1-23104-4 (2010).
  11. Zhu, L., Lu, L., Zhuang, W., Zeng, Z., Dong, M. Non-contact temperature-independent random-displacement sensor using two fiber bragg gratings. Applied Optics. 57 (3), 447(2018).
  12. Yu, H., Yang, X., Tong, Z., Cao, Y., Zhang, A. Temperature-independent rotational angle sensor based on fiber Bragg grating. IEEE Sensors Journal. 11 (5), 1233-1235 (2011).
  13. Liu, J., et al. A Wide-Range Displacement Sensor Based on Plastic Fiber Macro-Bend Coupling. Sensors. 17 (1), 196(2017).

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Przedruki i uprawnienia

Zapytaj o uprawnienia na użycie tekstu lub obrazów z tego artykułu JoVE

Zapytaj o uprawnienia

Przeglądaj więcej artyków

Displacement MeasurementMagnetic ScaleFiber Bragg GratingsOptical FiberPhase mask TechniqueHydrogen LoadingAnnealingPermanent MagnetsMagnetic Field DetectionPhase Difference

This article has been published

Video Coming Soon

JoVE Logo

Prywatność

Warunki Korzystania

Zasady

Badania

Edukacja

O JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Wszelkie prawa zastrzeżone