G01H9/004

Optical fiber ribbon imaging guidewire and methods

An intravascular or other 2D or 3D imaging apparatus can include a minimally-invasive distal imaging guidewire portion. A plurality of thin optical fibers can be circumferentially distributed about a cylindrical guidewire core, such as in an spiral-wound or otherwise attached optical fiber ribbon. A low refractive index coating, high numerical aperture (NA) fiber, or other technique can be used to overcome challenges of using extremely thin optical fibers. Coating and ribbonizing techniques are described. Also described are non-uniform refractive index peak amplitudes or wavelengths techniques for FBG writing, using a depressed index optical cladding, chirping, a self-aligned connector, optical fiber routing and alignment techniques for a system connector, and an adapter for connecting to standard optical fiber coupling connectors.

Rayleigh fading mitigation via short pulse coherent distributed acoustic sensing with multi-location beating-term combination

Aspects of the present disclosure describe Rayleigh fading mitigation via short pulse coherent distributed acoustic sensing with multi-location beating-term combination. In illustrative configurations, systems, methods, and structures according to the present disclosure employ a two stage modulation arrangement providing short interrogator pulses resulting in a greater number of sensing data points and reduced effective sectional length. The increased number of data points are used to mitigate Rayleigh fading via a spatial combining process, multi-location-beating combining (MLBC) which uses weighted complex-valued DAS beating results from neighboring locations and aligns phase signals of each of the locations, before combining them to produce a final DAS phase measurement. Since Rayleigh scattering is a random statistic, the MLBC process allows capture of different statics from neighboring locations with correlated vibration/acoustic signal. The combined DAS results minimize a total Rayleigh fade, in both dynamic fading and static fading scenarios.

UTILITY POLE DEGRADATION DETECTION SYSTEM, UTILITY POLE DEGRADATION DETECTION METHOD, AND UTILITY POLE DEGRADATION DETECTION DEVICE

A utility pole degradation detection system according to the present disclosure includes: a sensing optical fiber (10) laid on a plurality of utility poles (30); a receiving unit (201) that receives vibration information detected by the sensing optical fiber (10); an identifying unit (202) that identifies a natural frequency of each of the plurality of utility poles (30) on the basis of the vibration information; and an analyzing unit (203) that analyzes a degradation state of at least one utility pole (30) among the plurality of utility poles (30) on the basis of a natural frequency of each of the plurality of utility poles (30).

Downhole device with signal transmitter
11708749 · 2023-07-25 · ·

A downhole device for installation in a petroleum well, comprising a sensor, a controller and a power source. The device further comprises an acoustic speaker configured to output a sound signal from the downhole device to a fiber optic cable in the well.

INTEGRATED ANCHORING STRUCTURE OF BASALT FIBER REINFORCED PLASTIC BARS FOR RESERVOIR BANK SLOPE AND MONITORING SYSTEM THEREOF

An integrated anchoring structure of basalt fiber reinforced plastic (BFRP) bars for a reservoir bank slope includes: a plurality of BFRP anchoring bars, where each of the BFRP anchoring bars includes a plurality of BFRP bars bonded to one another, a lower steel casing pipe, an upper steel casing pipe and a steel strand bonded to an upper portion of the upper steel casing pipe and aligned with the BFRP bars, and a grating array temperature sensing optical cable, a grating array stress sensing optical cable and a grating array vibration sensing optical cable are bonded in each of the BFRP bars; a plurality of shear-resistant bricks distributed on structural planes; a pouring base arranged at a bottom of the anchoring borehole; and an anchoring section arranged at an upper portion of the pouring base.

Accelerometer structure including photonic crystal cavity

An accelerometer structure, a method for preparing the accelerometer structure and an acceleration measurement method are provided. The accelerometer structure includes a substrate having a groove structure, a test mass, a plurality of nano-tethers, and a nano-photonic-crystal measurement unit. The test mass, nano-tethers, and the nano-photonic-crystal measurement unit are suspended above the groove structure. A nano-photonic-crystal resonant cavity is formed in the nano-photonic-crystal measurement unit, and an acceleration of the test mass is characterized by a resonant frequency of the nano-photonic-crystal resonant cavity. The present disclosure provides a photoelasticity-based opto-micromechanical accelerometer structure, which uses a cavity resonance tension sensor in a nano-photonic-crystal cavity to measure a tension of the nano-photonic-crystal resonant cavity. The tension is concentrated in the nano-photonic-crystal resonant cavity, which makes the measurement of the tension more accurate and the resolution higher. Photoelastic-optomechanical coupling is also increased due to the nano-photonic-crystal resonant cavity.

FIBER SENSING USING SUPERVISORY PATH OF SUBMARINE CABLES

Systems, and methods for automatically identifying an underground optical fiber cable length from DFOS systems in real time and pair it with GPS coordinates that advantageously eliminate the need for in-field inspection/work by service personnel to make such real-time distance/location determinations. As such, inefficient, error-prone and labor-intensive prior art methods are rendered obsolete. Operationally, our method disclosure involves driving vehicles including GPS to generate traffic patterns and automatically mapping traffic trajectory signals from a deployed buried fiber optic cable to locate geographic location(s) of the buried fiber optic cable. Traffic patterns are automatically recognized; slack in the fiber optic cable is accounted for; location of traffic lights and other traffic control devices/structures may be determined; and turns in the fiber optic cable may likewise be determined.

LOCATION DETERMINATION OF DEPLOYED FIBER CABLES USING DISTRIBUTED FIBER OPTIC SENSING

Systems and methods for determining fiber optic facility (cable) location using distributed fiber optic sensing (DFOS) and sequence pattern matching of vibration excitation signals applied to a sensor fiber. The use of sequence pattern matching with unique pattern codes allow for the precise determination of location and length of deployed fiber cable while exhibiting an immunity from environmental vibrations proximate to the fiber. As a result improved measurements are realized and false alarms are eliminated.

GALLOPING MONITORING OF OVERHEAD TRANSMISSION LINES USING DISTRIBUTED FIBER OPTIC SENSING

Systems, and methods for monitoring galloping of overhead transmission lines using distributed fiber optic sensing (DFOS) in combination with frequency domain decomposition (FDD) (frequency domain) algorithms/methods. A DFOS interrogator/analyzer is used to collect real-time data for pre-processing. The pre-processed data is further processed by processing algorithms, which provide results to a graphical user interface or other reporting mechanisms that provide real-time monitoring, alarming, and reporting of the galloping status of the overhead transmission lines.

IDENTIFICATION OF FALSE TRANSFORMER HUMMING USING MACHINE LEARNING

Systems, and methods for automatically determining false transformer humming when using DFOS systems and methods to determine such humming along with machine learning approach(es) to identify the false transformer humming signal(s) that are transferred to a utility pole without a transformer from a working transformer on another utility pole. Advantageously, our inventive systems and methods employ a customized signal processing workflow to process raw data collected from the DFOS. Our employs a binary classifier that can automatically identify a transformer humming signal from a utility pole with a transformer and simultaneously identify the false humming signal from a utility pole without a transformer.