Intrinsic (all-fiber) fiber optic sensors

Intrinsic fiber optic sensors rely on the light beam propagating through the optical fiber being modulated by the environmental effect either directly or through environmentally induced optical path length changes in the fiber itself.



In this case an optical fiber leads up to a ‘‘black box’’ that impresses information onto the light beam in response to an environmental effect. The information could be impressed in terms of intensity, phase, frequency, polarization, spectral content, or other methods. An optical fiber then carries the light with the environmentally impressed information back to an optical and=or electronic processor. In some cases the input optical fiber also acts as the output fiber. The intrinsic or all-fiber sensor shown in image above uses an optical fiber to carry the light beam, and the environmental effect impresses information onto the light beam while it is in the fiber. Each of these classes of fibers in turn has many subclasses with, in some cases, sub-subclasses that consist of large numbers of fiber sensors.

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