Sapphire sensor apparatus including an optical fiber for measuring pressure and temperature
10495525 ยท 2019-12-03
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01L19/0092
PHYSICS
G01K11/3206
PHYSICS
International classification
G01D21/02
PHYSICS
G01L19/00
PHYSICS
G01L9/00
PHYSICS
G01D5/26
PHYSICS
Abstract
A sensor apparatus and system for measuring pressure, temperature or both with a single interrogator includes a sensor having a cavity, a diaphragm and an optical element or base for conducting energy to and from the cavity and diaphragm. The two surfaces of the diaphragm and a surface of optical element and either surface of the diaphragm are partially reflecting surfaces and respectively define two optical path distances (OPDs) that produce preferential reflections and interference patterns at different optical frequencies or wavelengths that are respectively affected by pressure or temperature. Arranging the OPDs such that the fundamental frequency and harmonics of preferential reflections one OPD do not coincide with the fundamental frequency or harmonics of another OPD provides for both temperature and pressure measurement with a single interrogator and without complex spectral analysis.
Claims
1. A sensor apparatus for measuring a pressure, a temperature, or both, the sensor comprising: a diaphragm configured to respond to a change in temperature or pressure, the diaphragm comprising at least one sapphire element; a base comprising at least one sapphire element; a cavity between the diaphragm and the base defined by a at least one of a recess in at least one of said base and said diaphragm and a sapphire spacer having a closed geometric shape wherein boundary surfaces of said diaphragm, a boundary surface of said base and boundary surfaces of said cavity are partially reflecting surfaces and respective pairs of said partially reflecting surfaces define optical path distances (OPDs) that produce preferential reflections and interference patterns at different optical frequencies and wherein said OPDs are arranged such that a fundamental frequency and major harmonics of the interference pattern for any OPD do not coincide with any fundamental frequency or major harmonic of an interference pattern for any other OPD, whereby all OPDs can be independently measured by a single interrogator, and an optical fiber that is configured to conduct light reflected off boundary surfaces of said cavity and said base and diaphragm.
2. The sensor apparatus as recited in claim 1, wherein said base comprises a thin base bonded to a thicker or long base and wherein said partially reflecting surface at said boundary of said base is a boundary of said thin base.
3. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein the at least two sapphire elements are connected via sapphire-to-sapphire direct bonds.
4. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein the sapphire elements are directly bonded such that the cavity is defined by a homogenous sapphire structure.
5. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein the diaphragm has a diameter or width extending across a surface of the diaphragm, and a length of the base is greater than a bonded diameter or width of the diaphragm.
6. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein the optical fiber terminates at a distal end thereof, and the optical fiber distal end is coupled to the base and is disposed proximal to the cavity.
7. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein a lens is disposed at a proximal surface of the base, the lens being configured to collimate light passing between the base and the optical fiber.
8. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein a light collimator or a fiber portion configured to act as a light collimator is provided at or near the distal end of the optical fiber.
9. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein the optical fiber comprises a length of graded index fiber.
10. The sensor apparatus of claim 1, wherein the optical fiber includes a segment of single crystal sapphire fiber and a length of glass fiber.
11. A system for measuring a pressure, a temperature, or both, the system comprising: a diaphragm configured to respond to a change in temperature or pressure, the diaphragm comprising at least one sapphire element; a base comprising at least one sapphire element; a cavity between the diaphragm and the base defined by at least one of a recess in at least one of said base and said diaphragm and a sapphire spacer having a closed geometric shape wherein boundary surfaces of said diaphragm, a boundary surface of said base and boundary surfaces of said cavity are partially reflecting surfaces and respective pairs of said partially reflecting surfaces define optical path distances (OPDs) that produce preferential reflections and interference patterns at different optical frequencies and wherein said OPDs are arranged such that a fundamental frequency and major harmonics of an interference pattern of any OPD do not coincide with any fundamental frequency or major harmonic of an interference pattern of any other OPD; an optical fiber that is configured to conduct light reflected off boundary surfaces of said cavity and said base or diaphragm; and an interrogator for independently detecting a deflection of said diaphragm and an OPD of the diaphragm or the base, respectively.
12. The system of claim 11, wherein said base comprises a thin base bonded to a thicker or long base and wherein said partially reflecting surface at said boundary of said base is a boundary of said thin base.
13. The system of claim 11, wherein the system is configured to demodulate one or more signals received by the interrogator to determine an OPD of at least one of the diaphragm, the cavity or the base.
14. The system of claim 11, wherein a whitelight interferometry unit is provided, the whitelight interferometry unit being configured to demodulate one or more signals received by the interrogator to determine an OPD of at least one of the diaphragm, the cavity and the base.
15. The system of claim 11, wherein the interrogator includes a tunable laser or a broadband light source and an optical spectrometer.
16. The system of claim 11, wherein said interrogator includes an optical coupler or optical circulator and a plurality of Fiber Bragg gratings having different center frequencies/wavelengths disposed along one or more optical fibers at different distances from said light source and said sensor.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
(1) Advantages of embodiments of the present invention will be apparent from the following detailed description of the exemplary embodiments. The following detailed description should be considered in conjunction with the accompanying figures in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(22) Aspects of the invention are disclosed in the following description and related drawings directed to specific embodiments of the invention. Alternate embodiments may be devised without departing from the spirit or the scope of the invention. Additionally, well-known elements of exemplary embodiments of the invention will not be described in detail or will be omitted so as not to obscure the relevant details of the invention. Further, to facilitate an understanding of the description discussion of several terms used herein follows.
(23) As used herein, the word exemplary means serving as an example, instance or illustration. The embodiments described herein are not limiting, but rather are exemplary only. It should be understood that the described embodiment are not necessarily to be construed as preferred or advantageous over other embodiments. Moreover, the terms embodiments of the invention, embodiments or invention do not require that all embodiments of the invention include the discussed feature, advantage or mode of operation.
(24) Further, many of the embodiments described herein are described in terms of sequences of actions to be performed by, for example, elements of a computing device. It should be recognized by those skilled in the art that the various sequences of actions described herein can be performed by specific optical components, devices, and circuits (e.g. application specific integrated circuits (ASICs)) and/or by program instructions executed by at least one processor. Furthermore, the sequence of actions described herein can be embodied in a combination of hardware and software. Thus, the various aspects of the present invention may be embodied in a number of different forms, all of which have been contemplated to be within the scope of the claimed subject matter.
(25) In an exemplary embodiment, a pressure sensor may be fabricated such that a pressure sensitive hollow cavity on a mechanical support that is made of the same material as that of the cavity. The construction may be such that there is no direct physical contact between the sensor metal casing or sensor housing and the proximity of the hollow cavity. The pressure sensitive cavity may be fabricated on a relatively long base. In another embodiment, a relatively shorter or smaller base may be provided. In this case, the pressure sensor may be mounted on another relatively long mechanical support that may be made of the same material.
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(27) A sensor probe may contain a pressure sensitive hermetically sealed hollow FP cavity. A hermetic seal may be realized by direct bonding of two, three or four single-crystal sapphire elements. Greater numbers of single-crystal sapphire elements may be combined as will be understood by those skilled in the art. One of the elements may be a diaphragm that can deflect under an externally applied pressure. The sapphire elements that form and surround the cavity may be directly bonded to one another such that the elements may collectively form a homogenous sapphire structure. The elements may form a substantially monolithic sapphire structure. The elements may be bonded via direct or fusion bonding without the use of any foreign materials which may have different coefficients of thermal expansion. Thus, the structure surrounding the cavity may consist essentially of sapphire.
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(30) In the exemplary embodiment shown in
(31) The length L of the sapphire base may be long, generally greater than the diaphragm outer diameter. The length of the base may be at least 2 times or 3 times the diaphragm outer diameter. Alternatively, other dimensions may be employed. As a result of the relatively long base 204, an influence on the cavity by stresses induced by a sensor mounting in sensor installation or ambient temperature varations may be negligible or substantially zero.
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(35) A relatively thin base 205 may be provided that is relatively thin compared to the outer diameter of the diaphragm. In this case, the thin base 205 may be bonded to another relatively long sapphire support 204 so the physical contact of the sapphire sensor probe with a sensor metal casing can be designed to be sufficiently distanced from the FP cavity. The support may be a solid cylinder, or may have a center through-hole 212 or partial hole 216 whose diameter may be constant or may vary along the hole as shown in
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(38) The FP cavities may be optically interrogated using an optical fiber 300. By the separation between the FP cavity and the interrogating fiber 300, the interrogation systems may be generally divided into two classes, namely close up interrogation and standoff interrogation.
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(40) The sensor or FP cavity interrogation may be realized by the use of an optical fiber 302, which may be a singlemode or a multimode fiber. The fiber may be or may be not connected to another fiber.
(41) A graded index quarter pitch fiber 304 may be spliced via thermal fusion to an interrogation fiber 302. The interrogation fiber 302 may be made of glass. The interrogation fiber 302 may also be connected to a segment of a single-crystal sapphire fiber 306 as shown in
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(43) By the spatial separation between the interrogation fiber or fiber/collimation lens assembly, and the FP cavities, the sensor interrogation methods may be divided into close-up and standoff interrogations. Using one of the four cases presented in
(44) The fiber 300 may also be mounted in the base 204 by the use of a fiber ferrule 322 as shown in
(45) The base 204 may also have a partial center hole 316 as shown in
(46) The fiber or the collimator end may have an anti-reflection (AR) coating or simply bare glass without any coating. An index-matching optical adhesive may also be used between the fiber collimator or the fiber/ferrule end and the bottom of the base partial hole. The optical adhesive may be defined to be transparent to the wavelength of the light used in the sensor interrogation. The index of refraction of the adhesive may match that of the fiber or the sapphire. The index of the adhesive may also be between the indices of the fiber and the sapphire. For a given index of the adhesive, by controlling the geometrical thickness of the adhesive on the front end of the fiber/ferrule assembly or the fiber collimator, the optical reflection from the adhesive layer can be increased or decreased to best support the sensor interrogation. The adhesive applied to the cylindrical surface of the fiber/ferrule assembly or the fiber collimator may be or may be not transparent adhesive for the wavelengths of the light used in the sensor interrogation.
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(48) When the sapphire is thin (L is comparable to or smaller than the diaphragm outer diameter), the thin base 205 may be bonded to a relatively long sapphire support 204. As shown in
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(51) Exemplary embodiments of the formation of the hollow FP cavity defined between the diaphragm and the end of the interrogation fiber may be shown in
(52) For applications where the sensor may be placed in a high temperature environment, the interrogation fiber 302 may be connected to a segment of sapphire fiber 306 as shown in
(53) For the different close-up and standoff interrogation schemes as previously described, multiple reflections from the interfaces between different elements may be generated.
(54) To realize simultaneous measurement of pressure and temperature, at least two OPDs including the one between R.sub.2 and R.sub.3 (the OPD of the hollow FP cavity) may be demodulated. Two exemplary methods by which to demodulate these OPDs will be discussed. The first is whitelight interferometry.
(55) Whitelight interferometry (WLI) allows the demodulation of a fiber Fabry-Perot interferometer. A WLI system may use either a tunable laser as the source or uses a broadband source such as a light emitting diode (LED) along with an optical spectrometer. The optical spectrum returned from the FP cavity may be measured. This spectrum may be modulated by the FP cavity so fringes with peaks and valleys may be observed in the detected optical spectrum. The peaks and valleys may correspond to constructive and destructive optical interference between the reflections from the FP cavity. By detecting the phase changes of the fringes in response to the FP cavity variation, the cavity OPD can be determined. When more than two reflections are returned from a composite FP cavity structure, fast Fourier transform (FFT) may be performed first. In the FFT spectrum, multiple peaks may appear which correspond to the interference between any pair of two reflections. When the OPDs of the composite FP structure are sufficiently different, these peaks may appear at different frequencies without overlap. These peaks may then be separated by the use of digital or analog bandpass filters. The interference fringes for each pair of reflections can be reconstructed and demodulated to determine the OPD between the two reflections [C. Ma, et al., Optimization of single-/Multi-/single-mode intrinsic Fabry-Perot fiber sensors, J. Lightwave Tech., 30, p 2281, 2012; C. Ma and A. Wang, Signal processing of white-light interferometric low-finesse fiber-optic Fabry-Perot sensors, Appl. Opt., 52, p 127, 2013].
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(58) To mathematically explain how each of the sensor OPDs can be determined using the WLI, we assign these OPDs to be the OPDd between R.sub.1 and R.sub.2, the OPDp between R.sub.2 and R.sub.3, and the OPDb between R.sub.3 and R.sub.4. As discussed previously OPDp is primarily sensitive to pressure. Due to the thermal expansion of the diaphragm shoulders that define the FP cavity distance and the thermal dependence of the Young's modulus of the diaphragm material, the OPDp is also temperature dependent. In the meantime, OPDd and OPDb are primarily sensitive to temperature but still show some degree sensitivity to pressure. To the first order of approximation, these three OPDs may be expressed as
OPD.sub.p=A.sub.p.sup.1p+A.sub.T.sup.1T(1)
OPD.sub.d=A.sub.p.sup.2p+A.sub.T.sup.2T(2)
OPD.sub.b=A.sub.p.sup.3p+A.sub.T.sup.3T(3)
(59) where A.sub.p.sup.i (i=1, 2 and 3) are the dependence coefficients of OPDp, OPDd, and OPDb on pressure, respectively, and A.sub.T.sup.t are the dependence coefficients of OPDp, OPDd, and OPDb on temperature. Generally, we have A.sub.p.sup.1>>A.sub.p.sup.2 and A.sub.p.sup.3 and A.sub.T.sup.2 and A.sub.T.sup.3>>A.sub.T.sup.1. By solving Eqs. (1), (2) and (3), both pressure and temperature can be simultaneously determined. Here both OPDd and OPDb are mainly sensitive to temperature variations but insensitive to pressure. For some applications where the sensor probe is immersed into a medium, such as oil, whose index of refraction may be relatively close to that of sapphire, R.sub.1 may be much weaker that R.sub.3 and R.sub.4, the temperature measured from OPDb may be more accurate.
(60) When an optical spectrometer is used to measure optical spectrum from the sensor, the response time may be limited below several kilohertz. Although high speed tunable lasers are available, they are generally expensive. However, many applications require cost-effective high-speed dynamic pressure measurement. In the meantime, the response time for temperature measurement may not be a strong requirement. This is also partially because the thermal mass of the sensor tip may prevent the temperature of the sensor tip to vary rapidly. In these cases, different sensor interrogation techniques may be used.
(61) Quadrature phase detection is a technique to measure relative changes of the OPD of an optical interferometer such as an FP cavity. The method may provide a low implementation cost and high speed signal demodulation. In addition, whitelight interferometry may require a minimum OPD for a given optical spectral range of detection. For example, for an LED at 1550 nm that has a spectral width of 50 nm, a minimum OPD may be more than 100 m to warrant a high demodulation accuracy. In contrast, the quadrature phase detection does not have this contingent requirement.
(62) The principle of quadrature phase detection is to inject two light beams at two different wavelengths .sub.1 and .sub.2. These two beams may also have a broadband spectrum. In this case the two wavelengths are effective center wavelengths of the two broadband spectra. For a given FP cavity, these two wavelengths are chosen such that their optical phases are different by N/2 where N is an integer. Using a standard quadrature phase detection, any change in the OPD can be determined [P. L. M. Heydemann, Determination and correction of quadrature fringe measurement errors in interferometers, Applied Optics, 20(19), 3382, 1981]. For the quadrature detection, it is preferred for the interrogation light to see interference fringes from only one FP cavity, which in the sapphire sensor case is the pressure sensitive hollow FP cavity. However, as described earlier, there are additional reflections from the sensor besides the two from the hollow FP cavity, such as R.sub.1 and R.sub.4 as shown in
OPD.sub.p<L.sub.c<OPD.sub.d and OPD.sub.b(4)
(63) where L.sub.c is the coherence length of the sources. The coherence length of a source with a Gaussian spectrum distribution is given by L.sub.c=.sub.0.sup.2/ where .sub.0 is the center wavelength and is the spectral width [Principle of Optics by M. Born and E. Wolf, 7th Edition, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 1999]. Here we assume the two sources have similar coherence lengths. When the condition in Eq. (4) is met, effective optical interference between R.sub.2 and R.sub.3 occurs but the other reflections namely R.sub.1 and R.sub.4 do not contribute to the generation of interference fringes.
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(65) The sources in the exemplary embodiment of
(66) Quadrature detection may be useful for high-speed sensor signal processing.
(67) The spatial separation between two neighboring FBGs may be denoted as D. D may be constant or varying. In the present explanation, D may be assumed to be constant. The FBGs may be disposed in one fiber or in different fibers. If the FBGs are disposed in different fibers, another 1N, NN fiber coupler or any other type of optical beam splitter, as would be reasonably understood by a person having ordinary skill in the art, may be used to split the reflections from the sensor into N channels of fiber. The optical distances between the FBGs and the fiber coupler may be different from each other.
(68) The optical signal reflected from the sensor may be reflected by the serial FBGs. Each FBG may reflect only a portion of the incident optical spectrum. The reflections from the serial FBGs may then be detected by a light detector (DET). The photoelectric signal may be amplified by an electronic amplifier (AMP) and digitized by an analog-to-digital converter (A/D) for further signal processing.
(69) Since the reflections from the serial FBGs may be delayed by different amounts of time, successive light pulses may appear at the DET. The magnitude of each pulse from each of the FBGs may offer a sampling of the optical spectrum of the signal reflected from the sensor. The sensor OPDs may then be determined by the application of an interferometric signal processing technique. The interferometric signal processing technique may include, but is not limited to, quadrature detection, whitelight interferometry, or any other technique as would reasonably be understood by a person having ordinary skill in the art.
(70) The temporal separation between neighboring pulses reflected from the serial FBGs may be designed to be relatively large by choosing a large D. As a result, the light source pulse width may be large and the requirement on the speed of the DET and AMP may be relaxed. Additionally, the requirement on the speed of the A/D may be reduced. This combination of features may allow high-speed sensor signal demodulation at a low cost.
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(72) The sensing schemes shown in
(73) The foregoing description and accompanying figures illustrate the principles, preferred embodiments and modes of operation of the invention. However, the invention should not be construed as being limited to the particular embodiments discussed above. Additional variations of the embodiments discussed above will be appreciated by those skilled in the art.
(74) Therefore, the above-described embodiments should be regarded as illustrative rather than restrictive. Accordingly, it should be appreciated that variations to those embodiments can be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the following claims.