Abstract
Distributed Dynamic Strain Sensing (DDSS), also known as Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS), is becoming a popular tool for volcano monitoring. The sensing method relies on sending coherent light pulses into an optical fibre and measuring the phase-shift of Rayleigh back-scattered light due to strain on the fibre. This provides distributed strain rate measurements at high temporal and spatial sampling rates. Standard telecom fibres have been conventionally used for this purpose, however engineered fibres are being developed to enhance the back-scattered light, providing up to 100 times improved sensitivity in contrast to the conventional standard fibre. Despite the technical advantages of engineered fibres, standard fibres already have extensive coverage around the Earth surface, and so there is an interest in using the existing telecommunication infrastructure. In this study we compare stack DDSS data from a fibre loops made of several fibres within the same optical fibre cable, with DDSS data measured on an engineered fibre. We analyse how stacking can improve the signal quality of the recorded DDSS data. In an area located 2.5 km NE from the craters of Mt. Etna, we spliced 9 standard fibres together from a 1.5 km long cable to create a single optical path and interrogated using an iDAS unit. At the same time, we interrogated with a Carina unit a 0.5 km engineered fibre installed parallel to the standard multi-fibre cable. Both fibres were interrogated in a common period of 5 days. We use a spatial cross-correlation function to find the channel equivalences between each fibre and then stack them to evaluate the changes in the DDSS data and compare with the engineered fibre data. Our results show that, despite engineered fibres have lower noise, a stack of 5 fibres can achieve a maximum noise reduction of 20% outside of the optical noise band, in comparison to the engineered fibre. We achieved this noise reduction for our specific configuration, and so we show how the stack improvement is dependent on the type of configuration in terms of fibres stacked and length of the fibres. Our findings motivate the exploitation of multi-fibre cables in existing infrastructures, so-called dark fibres, for monitoring volcano and applications to other environments.
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