Abstract

The erbium-doped-fiber-amplifier (EDFA), generally served as a pre-amplifier, could effectively raise the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of a Brillouin optical time-domain analysis (BOTDA) sensor. However, it also induces a distortion in the Brillouin gain spectrum and Brillouin frequency shift measurement errors due to the slow transient effect (STE) in the coded-BOTDA. We propose a distributed depletion mapping (DDM) method to overcome such an effect. A continuous light wave with a particular wavelength is injected to map the STE-induced depletion to compensate for the distortion. The proposed scheme is experimentally demonstrated along a 120-km sensing fiber with 2-m spatial resolution. Experimental results show that the conventional tail-alignment (TA) method cannot compensate for the STE over the whole fiber link, while the proposed DDM method compensates for over 7.69-MHz measurement errors.

Full Text
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