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Enabling variable high spatial resolution retrieval from a long pulse BOTDA sensor

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arxiv 2109.10349 v1 pith:2L54QEIH submitted 2021-09-09 eess.SP physics.optics

Enabling variable high spatial resolution retrieval from a long pulse BOTDA sensor

classification eess.SP physics.optics
keywords botdasensorshightimebrillouinimprovementlongmeasurement
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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In the field of Internet of Things, there is an urgent need for sensors with large-scale sensing capability for scenarios such as intelligent monitoring of production lines and urban infrastructure. Brillouin optical time domain analysis (BOTDA) sensors, which can monitor thousands of continuous points simultaneously, show great advantages in these applications. We propose a convolutional neural network (CNN) to process the data of conventional Brillouin optical time domain analysis (BOTDA) sensors, which achieves unprecedented performance improvement that allows to directly retrieve higher spatial resolution (SR) from the sensing system that use long pump pulses. By using the simulated Brillouin gain spectrums (BGSs) as the CNN input and the corresponding high SR BFS as the output target, the trained CNN is able to obtain a SR higher than the theoretical value determined by the pump pulse width. In the experiment, the CNN accurately retrieves 0.5-m hotspots from the measured BGS with pump pulses from 20 to 50 ns, and the acquired BFS is in great agreement with 45/40 ns differential pulse-width pair (DPP) measurement results. Compared with the DPP technique, the proposed CNN demonstrates a 2-fold improvement in BFS uncertainty with only half the measurement time. In addition, by changing the training datasets, the proposed CNN can obtain tunable high SR retrieval based on conventional BOTDA sensors that use long pulses without any requirement of hardware modifications. The proposed data post-processing approach paves the way to enable novel high spatial resolution BOTDA sensors, which brings substantial improvement over the state-of-the-art techniques in terms of system complexity, measurement time and reliability, etc.

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