Abstract

Brillouin based distributed fiber sensors present a unique set of characteristics amongst fiber sensing architectures. They are able to measure absolute strain and temperature over long distances, with high spatial resolution, and very large dynamic range in off-the-shelf fiber. However, Brillouin sensors traditionally provide only modest sensitivity due to the weak dependence of the Brillouin frequency on strain and the high signal to noise ratio required to identify the resonance's peak frequency to within a small fraction of its linewidth. Recently, we introduced a technique which substantially improves the precision of Brillouin fiber sensors by exciting a series of lasing modes in a fiber loop cavity that experience Brillouin amplification at discrete locations in the fiber. The narrow-linewidth and high intensity of the lasing modes enabled ultra-low noise Brillouin sensors with large dynamic range. However, our initial demonstration was only modestly distributed: measuring strain at 40, non-contiguous positions along a 400m fiber. In this work, we greatly extend this methodology to enable fully distributed sensing at 1000 contiguous locations along 3.5 km of fiber-an order of magnitude increase in sensor count and range. This highly-multiplexed Brillouin fiber laser sensor provides a strain noise as low as 34 nɛ/√Hz and we analyze the limiting factors in this approach.

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