Fibre (fiber) Bragg Grating (FBG) is a novel optical sensor recorded within the core of a standard optical fibre. It reflects a narrow bandwidth of light which responds faithfully to changes in temperature and strain. Hundreds of FBG sensors can be recorded onto a single optical fibre and interrogated simultaneously with a single instrument - the effect is a very low cost mechanism for distributed monitoring of strain and/or temperature within large structures, particularly suited to design validation and test and to structural health monitoring.
As well as strain and temperature measurement, FBGs can be used for other measurements such as pressure, acceleration and the like by the bare fibre sensor into transducers.
The diagram above illustrates how the strain applied to a Bragg Grating alters the wavelength of reflected light.
These FBG sensors, have numerous significant advantages over more conventional electrical sensor technologies.
Size
The fibre into which FBGs are recorded is tiny, just 0.25 mm or less in diameter. The means that many sensors can be applied to a structure with very little intrusion. Uniquely, a fibre sensor array can be embedded inside a composite to monitor for internal strain, temperature and damage with no affect on the structural performance of the composite.
Multiplexing
Hundreds of FBGs can be written into one optical fibre, and several hundred can be simultaneously interrogated by one multi-channel instrument. This provides a very low-cost mechanism for densely instrumenting even very large structures, compared with technologies where every sensor has a dedicated instrument. Furthermore, optical fibre is already smaller and much lighter than electrical wire and, together with this multiplexing capability, extensive FBG sensor installations can be made that were hitherto impossible in certain applications due to cable mass and volume.
Ease and Cost of Installation
Consider installing a large number of conventional electrical strain gauges. Each gauge needs to be bonded to the structure under test and then the bond pads associated with each gauge need to be bonded. Solder joints then need to be made in-situ between each gauge and its associated bond pads. Then electrical wires need to be soldered in-situ to all of the bond pads and then routed and secured back to the bank of instruments. Finally, the electrical bridge associated with each gauge needs to be balanced before measurements can commence.
By comparison, the structure can be instrumented by hundreds of FBG strain sensors simply by bonding one optical fibre to the structure, connecting it to a single FBG interrogator and pressing a single button to take a strain array reference that is valid for all future readings.
Bearing in mind that the installation engineers are skilled labour, and access to certain structures is difficult and expensive, the cost and time savings available through an optical fibre installation are clearly significant.
Signal Integrity
Optical fibre is a very efficient signal carrier. Because of this, the electrical interrogation unit can be sited many tens on Kms away from the sensing location, whereas conventional electrical strain gauge systems require regular amplification to avoid signal to noise degradation. For monitoring large, remote structures such as sea-bed pipelines or a long rail tunnels, this is a unique and invaluable benefit. Optical sensors are immune from down-lead effects and, since the measurand in a FBG sensing system is wavelength which is unaffected by signal attenuation, it is not possible for the value of a remote sensor to be corrupted whilst being transmitted along a long fibre.
Electrical Immunity
FBG sensors are passive and require no electrical power. Because of this, they are totally immune to interference from electrostatic or radio frequency sources. Furthermore, they are intrinsically safe and can be used to instrument the most hazardous explosive environments
Long-Term Stability
Another significant benefit that FBG sensors offer for remote monitoring is their stability over time. Being a passive sensor, a FBG has zero drift and can be used for many years with no need for recalibration. Indeed, it is practical to attach sensors to bridges for instance and return with an instrument to interrogate the sensors every few years to get a true picture of any structural movement since the last reading. This further increases the economic advantage of the technology since only one interrogation unit can service hundreds of structures
Fatigue Durability
Tests with carbon fibre coupons have shown that embedded fibre sensors show no signs of fatigue or disbonding after one million cycles. Similar tests with glass fibre materials will demonstrate that embedded sensors within wind turbine blades for instance will survive the 25 year service life of the blades themselves. For surface mounted applications, optical fibre sensors are less prone to debonding and are far more resilient to chemicals.