Abstract

In this article, a distributed optical fiber sensing system for large infrastructure temperature monitoring is proposed. To meet the requirements of monitoring networks in terms of measurement accuracy, spatial resolution, and real-time or quasireal-time performance, a quaternion wavelet transform (QWT) image denoising algorithm is proposed to address the original edge node data for the structural monitoring networks of large infrastructures. A distributed Brillouin optical time-domain analysis (BOTDA) sensing system with a 40-km sensing fiber is established. The raw Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS) image is decomposed into one magnitude image and three phase images by QWT. The phase images of the OWT are distributed randomly and disorderly with respect to the noise, while the magnitude image of the quaternion wavelet is greatly affected by the noise. The useful message energy of the magnitude image is concentrated on a small number of coefficients with large amplitude, while the noise mainly corresponds to the coefficients with smaller amplitude. Then, the Bayes shrink threshold method is introduced to filter out noise in the magnitude image. The results indicate that the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the frequency uncertainty have been improved significantly. The accuracy of the retrieved Brillouin frequency shift from denoised BGS images reaches 0.2 MHz, which corresponds to a temperature error of ±0.1 °C. Less than 4 s are required to process a BGS image with 50 <inline-formula xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"> <tex-math notation="LaTeX">$\times $ </tex-math></inline-formula> 40 000 pixels by the QWT denoising technique. The uploaded data obtained from 40 M bytes of raw data are reduced to 0.08 M bytes for each measurement. We hope that with technological progress and algorithm optimization, the distributed optical fiber sensing system based on the QWT image denoising algorithm will have an important role in the real-time application of large-scale infrastructure structural health monitoring for the Internet of Things.

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