Distributed acoustic sensors (DAS) perform distributed and dynamic
strain or temperature change measurements by comparing a measured
time-domain trace with a previous fiber reference state. Large strain
or temperature fluctuations or laser frequency noise impose the need
to update such a reference, making it necessary to integrate the
short-term variation measurements if absolute strain or temperature
variations are to be obtained. This has the drawback of introducing a
1/f noise component, as noise is integrated with each cumulative
variation measurement, which is detrimental to the determination of
very slow processes (i.e., in the mHz frequency range or below). This
work analyzes the long-term stability of chirped-pulse phase-sensitive
optical time-domain reflectometry (CP-ΦOTDR) with multi-frequency
database demodulation (MFDD) to carry out “calibrated” measurements in
a DAS along an unmodified SMF. It is shown that, under the conditions
studied in this work, a “calibrated” chirped-pulse DAS (CP-DAS) with a
completely suppressed reference update-induced 1/f noise component is
achieved capable of making measurements over periods of more than 2
months with the same set of references, even when switching off the
interrogator during the measurement.
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