Accurate chirped synthetic wavelength interferometer
10247538 ยท 2019-04-02
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
H04B10/5165
ELECTRICITY
G01B9/02007
PHYSICS
International classification
H04B10/071
ELECTRICITY
Abstract
A system is provided for measuring distance or displacement, comprising: first and second laser sources configured to provide first and second laser outputs; a beam combiner configured to receive and combine at least part of the first and second laser outputs into a combined laser output; a signal calibrator configured to receive at least part of the first laser output, the second laser output, or the combined laser output, and output a calibration signal; a plurality of optical paths, including a first optical path, a second optical path, the plurality of optical paths being configured to direct at least part of the combined beam onto an optical detector to produce an interference signal; and a signal processor configured to receive the interference signal and determine a pathlength difference between the first and second optical paths.
Claims
1. A system comprising: a first chirped laser source configured to provide a first laser output having a first optical frequency varying with a first chirp rate; a second chirped laser source configured to provide a second laser output having a second optical frequency varying with a second chirp rate; a calibration unit comprising at least one gas cell having at least one absorption line, the calibration unit configured to receive a portion of the first laser output and the second laser output and to output a calibration signal, wherein the first optical frequency, the second optical frequency, or both are swept through the at least one absorption line at the respective first chirp rate or second chirp rate; a first plurality of optical paths configured to direct at least a portion of the first laser output onto an optical detector to produce a first interference signal; a second plurality of optical paths configured to direct at least a portion of the second laser output onto the optical detector or a different optical detector to produce a second interference signal; and a signal processor configured to receive the first interference signal, the second interference signal, at least one of the first chirp rate or the second chirp rate, and the calibration signal, the signal processor further configured to: calibrate a synthetic wavelength and determine a synthetic fringe number or an interferometer fringe number, at least in part by measuring a time difference between a start time and a time the first optical frequency or the second optical frequency matches a feature of the at least one absorption line; and wherein the signal processor is further configured to determine a pathlength difference between at least two optical paths of the first and second plurality of optical paths using the synthetic wavelength.
2. The system claimed in 1, wherein the first chirped and the second chirped laser sources are actively linearized frequency-chirped lasers.
3. The system claimed in 1, wherein the first chirped and the second chirped laser sources are passively linearized frequency-chirped lasers.
4. The system claimed in 1, wherein any of the first plurality of optical paths are the same as any of the second plurality of optical paths.
5. The system claimed in 1, wherein the feature of the at least one absorption line corresponds to a center frequency of the at least one absorption line.
6. A system comprising: a first chirped laser source configured to provide a first laser output having a first optical frequency varying with a first chirp rate and a first chirp bandwidth; a second chirped laser source configured to provide a second laser output having a second optical frequency varying with a second chirp rate and a second chirp bandwidth; a calibration unit comprising a spectroscopic gas cell having at least one absorption line, the calibration unit configured to receive at least a portion of the first laser output and the second laser output and to output a calibration signal, the at least one gas absorption line being within a bandwidth of the first or the second chirp bandwidths, a first plurality of optical paths configured to direct at least a portion of the first laser output onto an optical detector to produce a first interference signal; a second plurality of optical paths configured to direct at least a portion of the second laser output onto the optical detector or a different optical detector to produce a second interference signal; and a processor configured to receive the first interference signal, the second interference signal, at least one of the first chirp rate or the second chirp rate, and the calibration signal, the processor further configured to: calibrate a synthetic wavelength including a synthetic fringe number or an interferometer fringe number, at least in part by measuring a time difference between a start time and a time the first optical frequency or the second optical frequency matches a center frequency of the at least one absorption line; and wherein the signal processor is further configured to determine a pathlength difference using the synthetic wavelength.
7. The system claimed in 6, wherein the spectroscopic gas comprises at least one of Acetylene, hydrogen cyanide, or Rubidium.
8. The system claimed in 6, wherein any of the first plurality of optical paths are at least partially in common with any of the second plurality of optical paths.
9. The system claimed in 6, wherein the first and second signal calibrators are implemented in a signal device.
10. The system in claimed in 6, further comprising: a second signal calibrator configured to output a second calibration signal comprising at least one of the first chirp rate or the second chirp rate.
11. A method, comprising: chirping a first laser output having a first optical frequency varying at a first chirp rate; chirping a second laser output having a second optical frequency varying at a second chirp rate; producing a combined beam which is the combination of the first and second laser outputs; directing the combined beam through at least a first, a second, and a third optical path, wherein the plurality of optical paths are configured to direct at least part of the combined beam onto an optical detector to produce a combined interference signal; measuring the combined interference signal contributions that result from the first and second laser outputs; measuring a first interference signal contribution that results from the first and second optical paths from a second interference signal contribution that results from the first and third optical paths by applying electronic or digital filtering; and processing one or both of the first interference signal contributions and the second interference signal contributions to determine the pathlength difference between at least two optical paths of the plurality of optical paths, wherein processing one or both of the first interference signal contributions and the second interference signal contributions comprises: calibrating a synthetic wavelength at least in part by measuring a time difference between a start time and a time the first optical frequency or the second optical frequency matches a center frequency of at least one absorption line of a gas cell; and determining a fringe number using the synthetic wavelength.
12. The method claimed in 11, wherein the fringe number corresponds to a synthetic fringe number or an interferometer fringe number.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) Chirped Synthetic Wavelength Interferometer
(14)
(15) The first frequency-chirped laser 110 and the second frequency-chirped laser 115 each output light of an optical frequency that changes substantially linearly (chirps) in time over a given chirp duration.
(16) The beam combiner/splitter 120 is configured to receive and combine at least part of the first and second laser outputs into a combined laser output. In some embodiments, a single laser may produce an output with both frequency-chirped components, in which case the beam combination occurs internal to the laser.
(17) The combined laser output from the beam combiner/splitter 120 is then split into a first portion and a second portion. The first portion is directed to the calibration unit 125. The second portion may be directed through the circulator 130 and a plurality of optical paths configured to direct at least part of the combined beam onto an optical detector to produce an interference signal.
(18) In
(19) A mathematical description of the interference signal produced by combining the LO and Rx1 resulting from one of the frequency-chirped laser outputs may follow from the formalism provided in Reference [Z. W. Barber, et al., Accuracy of active chirp linearization for broadband frequency modulated continuous wave ladar, Appl. Opt., 49, 213 (2010)]. However, it is understood that alternate formalism may be applied to other combinations of surfaces and frequency-chirped laser outputs. The time-varying electric field for the LO may be represented in the form:
(20)
(21) where .sub.0 is the angular optical frequency at the beginning of the chirp, and =2 is the angular chirp rate, where is the frequency chirp rate. The Rx1 field may be modeled by propagating the LO field to the sample surface and back. To accomplish this, one may first Fourier transform the LO field to the frequency domain to yield
(22)
(23) To model the return field, one may then propagate the LO field to a sample surface and back to the reference surface by applying a Taylor expanded form of the propagator e.sup.iz to yield
E.sub.Rx(,z=2R)=E(,z=0)e.sup.i2.sup.
(24) Here R is the range or separation between the reference surface 135 and a sample surfaces, 140, 145, and
(25)
Also, n is the refractive index of the medium between the reference and a sample surface, and v.sub.g is the group velocity in the medium. The time-domain description of the field reflected from a sample surface 140, 145, back to the reference surface 135, may be given by:
(26)
(27) The interference between the fields E.sub.LO and E.sub.Rx may generate a signal of the form
(28)
(29) For cases where dispersion is small, the terms involving .sub.2 and .sub.1.sup.2 may be neglected, and the signal may be adequately approximated by:
(30)
(31) To allow for two simultaneous frequency-chirped laser outputs and an arbitrary number of sample surfaces, Equation (10) may be generalized to the form:
(32)
(33) where the subscript j is used to identify the laser chirp (1=first or 2=second) and the subscript k is used to identify the particular pair of surfaces (typically the reference and one sample surface) that are interfering.
(34) The variable f.sub.beat,j,k is the measurable FMCW beat frequency and is given by:
f.sub.beat,j,k=2R.sub.k.sub.j.sub.1,j.(12)
(35) With f.sub.beat,j,k measured, this equation may be used to determine the range between surfaces through:
(36)
(37) which may be determined with a resolution and precision given by Equation (1) and Equation (3), respectively, when chirp nonlinearities and other noise sources can be neglected. The phase term in Equation (11) is defined by:
(38)
(39) where .sub.j=.sub.j/2 is the optical frequency of the j-th laser at the start of the chirp. .sub.j,k represents the traditional interferometer phase, which can only be measured modulo 2. The physically measurable phase is given by:
(40)
(41) where m.sub.j,k is an integer representing the number of standard interferometer fringes between the two surfaces for the laser with starting frequency .sub.j. Equation (15) can be rearranged to determine the range between the surfaces through
(42)
(43) where .sub.j is the vacuum wavelength of the j.sup.th laser at the start of the chirp. While this equation may be used to determine the range with very high precision given by Equation (3) with Equation (2) in the ideal case, it also highlights the standard interferometer fringe ambiguity problem because m.sub.j,k is typically large and unknown. However, if the range can be determined via a separate measurement to considerably better than a fringe (i.e. break the fringe ambiguity), then one may take full advantage of Equation (16). The fringe number may be obtained from a separate measurement by solving the equation
(44)
(45) Another useful quantity that can be extracted from the measurement described by Equation (11) is the synthetic interferometer phase, which is given by
(46)
(47) where l.sub.k is an integer representing the number of synthetic interferometer fringes between the two surfaces. The synthetic fringe number may be determined by a separate measurement of R.sub.k and may be calculated using
(48)
(49) where the well-known synthetic wavelength is given by
(50)
(51) The synthetic fringe number l.sub.k may be smaller than m.sub.j,k and may therefore be measured more easily from a practical standpoint. With known l.sub.k, Equation (18) can be rearranged to determine the range through
(52)
(53) Similarly, Equation (21) can be used to determine the absolute distance or separation between the surfaces with very high precision given by Equation (3) with Equation (2) in the ideal case.
(54) All three measurable quantities (the FMCW heterodyne beat frequency of Equation (12), the synthetic interferometer phase of Equation (18), and the standard interferometer phase of Equation (15) may be obtained from one measurement, represented by Equation (11). It is possible to use these measurable quantities, or a subset of them, to determine the range from the reference surface 135 to a sample surface 140, 145 with very high precision and accuracy.
(55) Method of Operation
(56)
(57) As shown in
(58) Measuring the frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) beat f.sub.beat,j,k using at least one chirped laser to determine the range R.sub.k coarsely using Equation (13). (210)
(59) Using the coarse range measurement to determine the synthetic fringe number, l.sub.k using Equation (19). (220)
(60) Using the synthetic fringe number l.sub.k and a measured synthetic interferometer phase to determine an intermediate range through Equation (21). (230)
(61) Using the intermediate range measurement to determine the interferometer fringe number, m.sub.j,k for at least one laser using Equation (17). (240)
(62) Using the interferometer fringe number m.sub.j,k and the measured standard interferometer phase to determine the fine range through Equation (16). (250)
(63) Two Linearized Frequency-Chirped Laser Embodiment
(64) In order to determine the fringe numbers l.sub.k and m.sub.j,k without error, the coarse and intermediate ranges R.sub.k should be measured with uncertainty much better than the synthetic and standard interferometer wavelengths, respectively. However, the prior art identifies nonlinearities in the frequency chirp or phase as factors that degrade the resolution, precision, and accuracy of the results or that necessitate complex components and processing to mitigate. To improve upon the prior art, the disclosed design uses linearized frequency-chirped lasers, which enable range measurements to closely approach the resolution and precision shown in Equation (1) and Equation (3), respectively.
(65) While optical sideband chirps by means of external modulation (e.g. an electro-optic modulator) can be straightforward to achieve up to about 10 GHz and exhibit very low excursions from linearity, this technique can become complex and expensive much beyond 10 GHz. On the other hand, >10 GHz chirps of an optical carrier can be routinely achieved by changing the current, temperature, or mechanical cavity length of, for instance, semiconductor distributed feedback (DFB) lasers, vertical cavity surface emitting lasers (VCSELs), and external cavity diode lasers (ECDLs). However, not until recently have passive and active techniques been developed to linearize optical chirps over large bandwidths (>>10 GHz).
(66) One example embodiment uses two actively linearized frequency-chirped lasers 110, 115 in the configuration shown in
(67)
(68) The lasers may be chirped simultaneously in opposite directions, as disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 5,371,587. Using at least one of these lasers, the coarse range, R.sub.k, may be determined using Equation (13). With linearized frequency-chirped lasers this measurement may be made with a resolution of about 1.5 mm and a precision of less than about 5 m from Equation (1) and Equation (3), respectively, assuming 50 dB SNR for a 1 ms integration time.
(69) For this embodiment the centers of the two laser chirp bandwidths may be spaced by about 4 THz, as shown in
(70) With knowledge of the correct synthetic fringe number, measurement of the synthetic interferometer phase may be used to determine the intermediate range through Equation (21). By using linearized frequency-chirped lasers, and therefore linear phase, the intermediate range may be determined with a precision of about 60 nm using Equation (2) and Equation (3), and again assuming a 50 dB SNR. Using lasers with a wavelength near 1.5 m, 60 nm precision is sufficient to enable accurate determination of the standard interferometer fringe number, m.sub.j,k, for either or both lasers, through Equation (17).
(71)
(72) In particular,
(73) With knowledge of the correct standard fringe number, measurement of the standard interferometer phase may be used to determine the fine range through Equation (16). By using linearized frequency-chirped lasers, and therefore linear phase, the fine range may be determined with a precision of about 2 nm using Equation (2) and Equation (3), and again assuming a 50 dB SNR. In determining a range for which the laser light enters a surface from low to high index of refraction (e.g. from air to glass), the well-known 180 phase flip of the reflected light from that surface should be included in the calculation of the range. In that case, .sub.j,k may be replaced by .sub.j,k in Equation (16). It is also understood that refractive index and dispersion in the material between surfaces may need to be accounted for to accurately determine range. This example embodiment shows that the use of linearized frequency-chirped lasers enable a range measurement with 2 nm Cramer-Rao-limited precision in a 1 ms measurement time.
(74) In determining the absolute distance, accuracy may be equally as important as precision and again the use of linearized frequency-chirped lasers may be important to achieve fine accuracy. Therefore, one of the output paths of the beam splitter/combiner 120 in
(75) In this embodiment, a spectroscopic gas cell may be used in the calibration unit 125 to determine these needed parameters. Fundamental atomic or molecular absorption lines provide wavelength references that are very stable under changing environmental conditions, such as temperature and pressure variations or the presence of electromagnetic fields. (See, e.g., S. L. Gilbert, W. C. Swann, and Chih-Ming Wang, Hydrogen Cyanide H13C14N Absorption Reference for 1530 nm to 1565 nm Wavelength CalibrationSRM 2519a, NIST Special Publication 260-137, 2005 Edition.)
(76) In this embodiment, a NIST-traceable H13C14N gas cell may be used with typical absorption line spacings of about 50-105 GHz. During each laser's chirp the optical frequency may be swept over at least two absorption lines. With well-known frequency separation of the lines, linearized frequency chirps, and accurate measurement timing, it is therefore readily possible to calculate the chirp rate through .sub.j=v/t where v is the frequency separation between two absorption lines and t is the time for the laser frequency to be swept between the same two lines. It is understood that other absorption characteristics such as the width of a single line could also be used in addition to or instead of the separation between absorption lines.
(77) While the absolute frequencies of the absorption lines are known to about 5-25 MHz, the most accurately known lines can be chosen and in practice the frequency spacing between adjacent lines can be determined better than this. With an absorption line separation known to better than 1 MHz, and a frequency separation of 100 GHz between absorption lines, the chirp rate .sub.j, and thus the FMCW distance measurement, may therefore be calibrated by this method to better than about one part in 10. However, this determination of .sub.j also requires that the deviations of the laser frequency from a perfectly linear chirp remain significantly under about 10 MHz. This condition may be achieved using either passive or active chirp linearization techniques, or by adjusting the measurement clock to produce uniform K-space sampling.
(78) The quantity (.sub.2.sub.1), which determines the synthetic wavelength, may be calibrated in a similar manner, but the separation between the applicable absorption lines is about 4 THz for the present embodiment, as shown in
(79) Similarly, by chirping across an absorption line, at least one of the laser start frequencies .sub.j can be determined to about 5 parts in 10.sup.8 (10 MHz accuracy out of 200 THz optical frequency). This indicates that absolute distance may be calibrated to the nanometer and sub-nanometer scale for distances and thickness up to about 30 cm. Improved wavelength references and chirp linearization may be used to increase this distance. The disclosed technique of sweeping over absorption features and utilizing the frequency and phase linearity of linearized frequency chirped lasers to calibrate the chirp rate and the optical frequencies .sub.1 and .sub.2 in this patent is simpler and potentially faster than the previously disclosed technique of stabilizing the lasers to absorption features. It is understood that the refractive index, group refractive index and dispersion may need to be known to the same or better accuracy than the optical frequencies and chirp rates in order to achieve the desired performance.
(80) Single Laser Embodiment
(81) It is also possible to perform a form of chirped synthetic wavelength measurements using a single frequency-chirped laser instead of two or more. The disclosed technique is related to previous incoherent length metrology techniques that measure the RF phase of optical intensity modulation. (See, e.g., I. Fujimay, S. Iwasaki and K. Seta, High-resolution distance meter using optical intensity modulation at 28 GHz, Meas. Sci. Technol. 9 (1998) 1049-1052, and A. Barker, Performance enhancement of intensity-modulated laser rangefinders on natural surfaces, SPIE Vol. 5606 (2004).) However, the previous methods may be degraded by reflections from surfaces other than the sample surface or by low signal levels, and may require high receiver bandwidth.
(82)
(83) As shown in
(84) The first frequency-chirped laser output portion (Tx) may be transmitted through the first modulator 525 and modulated at frequency f.sub.mod. This portion may be transmitted to the measurement surface 535, 537. A portion of the reflected or scattered light (Rx1, Rx2) may be directed through the second modulator 540 and demodulated at a slightly different modulation frequency (f.sub.mod+f), where f may be made small to accommodate low detector bandwidths if desired.
(85) Light from the second modulator 540 may be recombined with the second frequency-chirped laser output portion (LO) and the combined light may be directed onto an optical detector in the detection and processing unit 555 to produce an interference signal. The range to target may be obtained by measuring the RF phase shift for f.sub.mod accumulated over the transit from the first modulator 525 to the second modulator 540, which is also present at the difference frequency f. This phase shift can be determined by measuring the relative phase difference between two of the RF modulation sidebands corresponding to the coherent carrier.
(86) Mathematically, the detected interference signal may be given by Equation (10) for one laser, one pair of surfaces, where the LO path in
S(t)cos(2f.sub.modt+.sub.1)cos [2(f.sub.mod+f)t+.sub.2]e.sup.i(2f.sup.
(87) where f.sub.beat is the standard FMCW heterodyne beat note, .sub.1 is the RF phase of modulator 1, .sub.2 is the RF phase of modulator 2, the standard interferometer phase term has been neglected, and the DC bias phase of each intensity modulators has been set to zero to simplify the mathematics. Retaining only terms that oscillate at frequencies near f.sub.beat yields
S(t)e.sup.i(2(f.sup.
(88) where =.sub.2.sub.1 is the RF phase difference between the LO path and the Rx path, which contains the physical path length difference. This equation shows that the effect of modulation and demodulation of the chirped laser is to add intensity modulation sidebands (offset from f.sub.beat by f) to the standard FMCW carrier beat note. When the DC bias phase of the intensity modulators is set to zero, as has been assumed here, the carrier beat note is suppressed, leaving only the sidebands separated by 2f.
(89)
(90) The important distance information is contained in the RF phase that may be obtained by subtracting the phase evolution of the upper sideband from that of the lower sideband corresponding to a single surface, which yields
.sub.usb(t).sub.lsb(t)=2(2ft+)(24)
(91) The phase evolution of each sideband may be obtained by applying a band-pass filter to the desired sideband. An example digital filter function is shown as the black line 610 in
(92)
(93) where m.sub.RF is an integer that may be determined by a different measurement to remove the RF fringe ambiguity. In particular, the FMCW range measurement can be used to remove the RF fringe measurement.
(94) For this embodiment, frequency and phase noise due to speckle, Doppler, nonlinear frequency chirps, or other sources may be common mode for both of the RF sidebands. Therefore, the subtraction of the phase between the sidebands may suppress such common-mode noise.
(95)
(96) While this embodiment (
(97) The first and second modulators 525, 540 may also be placed at different locations in the setup and still enable extraction of the RF phase. For instance, the second modulators 540 may be placed in the LO path. Or, one modulator 525, 540 may be used with both modulation and demodulation frequencies in the combined Tx/Rx path after the circulator. Also, the modulation could be performed using direct modulation of the laser source. If higher RF bandwidth is acceptable, only one modulator or direct modulation is possible and demodulation is not necessary.
(98) Measurement of Multiple Surfaces
(99) A significant drawback of traditional interferometry is the fact that light from multiple surfaces can give distance errors because the multiple surfaces may contribute to one indistinguishable interferometric signal. However, as shown in
(100) The first multi-surface case is when the surfaces of interest are well resolved by the FMCW measurement, such as those shown in
(101) The second case for measurement of multiple surfaces is when the surfaces are not well resolved by the FMCW measurement so that the peaks may interfere or otherwise affect one another. In this case, the disclosed embodiments teach how it is still possible to accurately determine the range of each peak, even if the peaks are closely spaced. In this case, it may not be possible to separate and filter the peaks associated with sample surfaces, but the disclosed embodiments teach how it still may be possible to accurately or precisely determine the range to sub-resolved sample surfaces, and their separations, even if the peaks are closely spaced. This determination is complicated by the fact that the measurement is coherent, so the optical phase of the reflection from each surface can dramatically alter the peak shape and corrupt the range determination.
(102) One may apply the steps shown in
(103) Using fitting of the known functional form of the surfaces given by Eqn (11), or approximations to that functional form, with amplitude (1063, 1064), range (1061, 1062), and phase (1065, 1067) of the measured signals as the fit parameters, the locations of the two surfaces may be determined far better than the range resolution. The dashed curves in
(104)