Publication | Closed Access
Probing the Ultimate Limit of Fiber-Optic Strain Sensing
233
Citations
25
References
2010
Year
Relative DisplacementsEngineeringStrain MeasurementsMeasurementMechanical EngineeringVibration MeasurementOptomechanical SystemOptical MetrologyUltimate LimitEducationFiber OpticsOptomechanicsOptical PropertiesCalibrationOptical SystemsInstrumentationε HertzPhotonicsPhysicsFiber Optic SensingStructural Health MonitoringTime MetrologyThermal PhysicsFiber OpticOptical SensorsApplied PhysicsOptical Sensor
The measurement of relative displacements and deformations is important in many fields such as structural engineering, aerospace, geophysics, and nanotechnology. Optical-fiber sensors have become key tools for strain measurements, with sensitivity limits ranging between 10(-9) and 10(-6)ε hertz (Hz)(-1/2) (where ε is the fractional length change). We report on strain measurements at the 10(-13)ε-Hz(-1/2) level using a fiber Bragg-grating resonator with a diode-laser source that is stabilized against a quartz-disciplined optical frequency comb, thus approaching detection limits set by thermodynamic phase fluctuations in the fiber. This scheme may provide a route to a new generation of strain sensors that is entirely based on fiber-optic systems, which are aimed at measuring fundamental physical quantities; for example, in gyroscopes, accelerometers, and gravity experiments.
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