2007
DOI: 10.1088/0957-0233/18/5/059
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Practical spatial resolution limits of high-resolution fibre Bragg grating sensors using layer peeling

Abstract: Inverse scattering methods such as layer peeling have been shown to reconstruct the longitudinal refractive index of fibre Bragg gratings with very high spatial resolution. These high spatial resolution measurements can be used to detect strain fields and thermal variations through the strain-optic and thermo-optic effects. However, physical constraints do not allow the refractive index to change on scales as short as these methods are capable of resolving. We demonstrate that this imposes a practical limitati… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The main stake today in the field of fiber optics interferometry is the control of polarization. Some results related to this subject are to be published (Levy et al, 2006;Waagaard, 2006;Coric et al, 2006;Espejo et al, 2007). The set of feasible characterizations needs to be broadened and their precision needs to be improved.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The main stake today in the field of fiber optics interferometry is the control of polarization. Some results related to this subject are to be published (Levy et al, 2006;Waagaard, 2006;Coric et al, 2006;Espejo et al, 2007). The set of feasible characterizations needs to be broadened and their precision needs to be improved.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…n, n L and n R depend on the wavelength λ, the temperature t and the pressure. In this study we will consider that measurements are made at atmospheric pressure and that its variations can be neglected as glass indices depend on pressure with a coefficient close to 4 • 10 −8 /dbar, as mentioned in [10]. If we take into account the position (P − P 0 ) led by the refraction angle γ, we have…”
Section: Description Of the Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Refractive index n m of a medium is the ratio between the speed of light in a vacuum (c) to its value (v) in the considered medium n m = c/v. There are different approaches to measure the refractive index, such as fibre Bragg grating (Joseph Espejo and Dyer, 2007) or Brillouin effect (Nikes et al, 1996), surface plasmon sensor (Matsubara et al, 1990), refractometer (Minato et al, 1989), or interferometer (Le Menn and Lotrian, 2001). Among these, the refractometer is the simplest and the most straightforward.…”
Section: Design Of a Psd Refractometer For Practical Salinity Rangesmentioning
confidence: 99%