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| United States Patent |
5,047,626 |
| Bobb , et al. |
September 10, 1991 |
Optical fiber sensor for measuring physical properties of liquids
Abstract
A physical property of a liquid or of any optical fiber is measured using
optical fiber interferometer. A conductive material is disposed upon the surface
of a region of a light transmitting optical fiber and the region having the
conductive material is disposed in the liquid. Light energy is applied to one
end of the fiber and transmitted light is received at the other end of the
fiber. Electrical energy is applied to the conductive material disposed upon the
surface of the fiber to heat the region of the fiber and cause a change in the
optical path length of the light transmitted through the fiber. The physical
property of the liquid or optical fiber is determined in accordance with the
change in the optical path length of the received light caused by applying the
electrical energy to the conductive material. A series of short energy pulses is
provided and the average phase change is determined. The conductive material is
gold and it encircles the fiber. The gold may be disposed on the jacket of the
fiber or the jacket may be removed before disposing the gold.
| Inventors: |
Bobb; Lloyd C. (Warminster, PA);
White; Barbara J. (Hatboro, PA); Davis; Jon P. (Willow
Grove, PA) |
| Assignee: |
The United States of America as represented
by the Secretary of the Navy (Washington, DC) |
| Appl. No.: |
460435 |
| Filed: |
January 3, 1990 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
250/227.19; 250/231.1 |
| Intern'l Class: |
H01J 005/16 |
| Field of Search: |
250/227.19,231.1 324/96 350/96.29
356/44,72,357-359 |
References Cited [Referenced
By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 4530603 |
Jul., 1985 |
Shaw et al. |
250/227. |
| 4563639 |
Jan., 1986 |
Langeac |
250/227. |
| 4621929 |
Nov., 1986 |
Phillips |
356/44. |
| 4627728 |
Dec., 1986 |
Willson |
250/227. |
| 4929050 |
May., 1990 |
Wilson |
250/227. |
Primary
Examiner: Nelms; David C.
Assistant Examiner: Allen; Stephone
Attorney, Agent or Firm: Tura; James V., Bechtel; James B., Verona;
Susan E.
Goverment Interests
STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT INTEREST
The invention described herein
may be used by and for the Government of the United States of America for
governmental purposes without the payment of any royalties thereon or therefor.
Claims
What we claim is:
1. A method for measuring a physical property
of a liquid using a light transmitting optical fiber having an optical path
length, comprising the steps of:
(a) disposing a conductive material
upon the surface of a region of said light transmitting optical fiber;
(b) disposing at least a portion of said fiber region having said
conductive material in said liquid;
(c) applying light energy to a first
end of said light transmitting optical fiber;
(d) thermally changing
said optical path length in response to electrical energy applied to said
conductive material while said fiber is disposed in said liquid;
(e)
receiving transmitted light at a second end of a said optical fiber,
(f)
determining the change in said optical path length in accordance with said
received light; and,
(g) determining said physical property of said
liquid in accordance with said thermally changed optical path length.
2.
The method of claim 1, wherein step (f) comprises determining said change in
said optical path length in accordance with the change inn phase of said
received light when said electrical energy is applied to said conductive
material.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein step (d) comprises the step
of applying a substantially short electrical energy pulse.
4. The method
of claim 3, wherein step (d) comprises applying an electrical energy pulse of
approximately one millisecond duration.
5. The method of claim 1,
comprising the further step of applying a plurality of electrical energy pulses.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein data representative of received light
for a plurality of electrical energy pulses are averaged.
7. The method
of claim 1, wherein step (d) comprises raising the temperature of said region a
few tenths of a degree.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein step (a)
comprises the step of disposing said conductive material upon a jacket of said
optical fiber.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein step (a) is preceded by
the step of removing a fiber jacket from said optical fiber.
10. The
method of claim 1, wherein step (a) comprises encircling said optical fiber with
said conductive material.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein step (a)
comprises encircling said optical fiber with a layer of conductive material
having a thickness of approximately one-tenth micron.
12. The method of
claim 1, wherein step (a) comprises disposing said conductive material upon the
surface of a region of said optical fiber wherein the region has a length of
approximately one inch.
13. The method of claim 1 wherein step (a)
comprises disposing gold upon the surface of said optical fiber.
14. The
method of claim 1, wherein step (g) comprises determining the thermal
conductivity of said liquid in accordance with said received light.
15.
The method of claim 1, wherein step (f) comprises determining the diffusivity of
said liquid in accordance with said received light.
16. The method of
claim 1, wherein step (f) comprises determining a parameter of said optical
fiber in accordance with said received light.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to a device
for measuring the physical properties of liquids and in particular to a device
for measuring physical properties of liquids using the interference of light
waves.
It is well known in the art to use fiber optic systems for
temperature measurement and monitoring of liquids. For example, these systems
are commonly used when monitoring the temperature of flammable liquids because
non-electrical sensing devices eliminate a source of explosion hazard associated
with electrical temperature monitoring systems.
The thermal
conductivities of liquids are often measured because the thermal conductivities
of liquids are required for various heat transfer analyses. These conductivities
are commonly obtained with a transient hot-wire apparatus. In this technique a
thin platinum wire, serving as both a heating element and a thermometer, is
heated resistively with a current pulse of about one second duration. The
thermal conductivity of the surrounding medium is determined from the
temperature change of the wire as a function of time. In this type of analysis
an approximate solution of the heat conduction equation is used, where the slope
of the change in temperature versus the natural log of time curve is inversely
proportional to the thermal conductivity of the medium. In applying this method,
a number of corrections are necessary due to the finite diameter and finite
thermal conductivity of the platinum wire. Additionally, a correction for the
temperature dependence of the fluid properties is necessary. With these
corrections incorporated into the analysis, the technique allows for thermal
conductivity determinations with an accuracy of 0.2%.
Another method for
measuring temperature using an optical fiber is disclosed in Langeac U.S. Pat.
No. 4,563,639. In the apparatus of Langeac, a probe is formed by winding an
optical fiber in a generally solenoid shape. U.S. Pat. No. 4,621,929, issued to
Phillips and entitled "Fibre Optic Thermal Anemometer," teaches a device for
measuring the heat transfer coefficient of a sample.
SUMMARY OF THE
INVENTION
A physical property of a liquid is measured using a light
transmitting optical fiber interferometer. A conductive material is disposed
upon the surface of a region of the light transmitting optical fiber and the
region having the conductive material is disposed in the liquid. Light energy is
applied to one end of the fiber and transmitted light is received at the other
end of the fiber. Electrical energy is applied to the conductive material
disposed upon the surface of the fiber to heat the region of the fiber and cause
a change in the optical path length of the light transmitted through the fiber.
The physical property of the liquid or optical fiber is determined in accordance
with the change in the interference pattern of the received light.
BRIEF
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 shows the thermal conductivity cell
of the optical fiber sensor of the present invention for measuring thermal
conductivity,
FIGS. 2a and 2b show cross-sectional representations of a
conductor coated region of an unjacketed optical fiber and a jacketed optical
fiber, respectively, of the thermal conductivity cell of the present invention,
FIG. 3 shows the experimental apparatus used to test the thermal
conductivity sensor of the present invention including a Mach-Zehnder
interferometer,
FIG. 4 shows the core temperature of the fiber of FIG. 1
as a function of time when a one millisecond square pulse is applied to a
conducting region disposed on the surface of the fiber of FIG. 1,
FIG. 5
shows a graphical representation of the variation of peak core temperature of
the fiber of FIG. 1 as a function of the concentration of ethylene glycol plus
water mixtures.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
Referring
now to FIGS. 1, 2a,b, there is shown thermal conductivity cell 10 and a
cross-sectional view of optical fiber 12 of thermal conductivity cell 10 for
measuring physical properties of a liquid. In thermal conductivity cell 10 there
is provided a thin layer 14 formed of gold and disposed on the surface of
optical fiber 12 either on the outer surface of silica substrate 17 or on the
outer surface of jacket 19 surrounding silica substrate 17. Gold layer 14 may be
sputtered onto the surface of fiber 12 and may have a thickness of approximately
one-tenth of a micron. The section of fiber 12 having gold layer 14 is disposed
in well 18 of block 19. The liquid being monitored is placed in well 18 to
permit immersion of gold layer 14 in the liquid.
Electrical energy is
applied to gold layer 14 and the temperature rise of optical fiber 12 due to the
applied electrical energy is determined by measuring the change in optical path
length in optical fiber 12. This temperature is influenced by the thermal
conductivity of the liquid. Thus, the thermal conductivity of the liquid may be
determined in accordance with the measured light. This thermal conductivity
measurement requires a temperature rise of only tenths of degree of the optical
fiber in thermal conductivity cell 10; the corrections associated with the
temperature dependence of the fluid properties are unnecessary.
In
addition, heat conduction is determined numerically for the regions inside and
outside of fiber 12 so that no corrections associated with the approximate
solution are required. Another advantage associated with the short-time
measurement of the thermal conductivity cell 10 is the minimization of possible
convective losses which would unnecessarily complicate the thermal conductivity
determination. The time delay associated with the onset of convection is much
greater than the pulse times used.
Single-mode optical fiber 12 of
thermal conductivity cell 10 of the present invention may be an ITT Type T-1601
having a four micron diameter silica core 13, a forty micron outside diameter
B.sub.2 O.sub.3 -doped silica cladding 15, an eighty-five micron outside
diameter silica substrate 17, and a silicone/plastic jacket 19. Jacket 19 may be
removed from a section of fiber 12 over a length of fiber 12 which may be
approximately two and one-half centimeters. Gold film 14 is sputtered onto the
surface of fiber 12 completely encircling the region wherein jacket 19 is
removed. Alternately, gold film 14 may be deposited directly on jacket 19.
Referring now to FIG. 3, there is shown Mach-Zehnder interferometer
system 20 wherein thermal conductivity cell 10 forms one arm of Mach-Zehnder
interferometer 15. Interferometer system 20 also includes single-mode couplers
22a,b which may be 3dB 2.times.2 Amphenol couplers. Light from single-frequency
heliumneon laser 24 is applied by way of lens 26 to the end of input fiber 28
having polarization controller 29. The light is split evenly between arms 30, 32
of interferometer 15 at first coupler 22a. Arm 30 of interferometer 15 includes
a PZT stretcher 34 to maintain interferometer 15 at quadrature. Arm 32 of
interferometer 15 is coupled to thermal conductivity cell 10. Electrodes 16 are
electrically coupled to gold layer 14 of fiber 12 with silver paint. Gold layer
14 is then immersed in the fluid medium whose thermal conductivity is to be
determined. Approximately 1.4 cubic centimeters of the fluid are sufficient for
this measurement. The light from arms 38, 40 is combined at coupler 22b and
exits through coupler 22b and is collected by photodiodes 42 for comparison by
differential amplifier 46. Feedback from differential amplifier 46 is applied to
PZT fiber stretcher 34 by way of locking amplifier 48.
Gold-coated fiber
12 is resistively heated repeatedly with one millisecond voltage or current
pulses with a one percent duty cycle from pulse generator 36. Thus the single
section of fiber 12 having gold layer 14 disposed thereupon serves as both the
heating element and the thermometer of interferometer system 20. The pulses from
pulse generator 36 are applied to gold-coated fiber 12 by way of electrodes 16.
Each pulse from pulse generator 36 produces a time-dependent signal which is
proportional to the optical phase change in arm 32 containing thermal
conductivity cell 10 because temperature changes of fiber 12 within gold layer
14 are observed as a shifting of the interference pattern. These signals are
recorded and stored by signal analyzer 44. Signal analyzer 44 may, for example,
be an HP 3651A Signal Analyzer. The time-averaged signal produced by one hundred
such pulses was recorded.
The temperature sensitivity of gold-coated
fiber 12 may be determined both theoretically and experimentally. In the
experimental determination, microdegree temperature changes are observed. In the
theoretical determination, the phase of a wave propagating in fiber 12 of length
L is given by
.phi.=2.pi.nL/.lambda. (1)
where n is the
effective refractive index, which may be approximated by the refractive index of
the core of fiber 12, and .lambda. is the wavelength of the light in free space.
A change in fiber 12 temperature .DELTA.T results in a phase shift .DELTA..phi.
of the light in fiber 12 because of the temperature-induced change in the
refractive index of the core of fiber 12, the change in the length of fiber 12
due to thermal expansion, and the photoelastic effect. The temperature
sensitivity of the gold-coated section 14 fiber 12 may be expressed as
.DELTA..phi.(L.DELTA.T)=(2.pi./.lambda.)[(.rho.n/.rho.T)
+n.epsilon..sub.z /.DELTA.T-(n.sup.3 /2.DELTA.T)[(P.sub.11
+P.sub.12).epsilon..sub.r +P.sub.12 .theta..sub.z]] (2)
where .rho. is
the core density, .epsilon..sub.z and .epsilon..sub.r are the axial and radial
strains, and P.sub.11 and P.sub.12 are the Pockels coefficients. Fiber 12 is
considered to consist of four concentric layers: the core, the cladding, the
substrate, and the one-tenth micron gold layer 14. The strains resulting from
the temperature change .DELTA.T are calculated using the method of Schuetz et
al. The sensitivity for the unjacketed fiber thus determined is
.DELTA..phi./L.DELTA.T=16.3 fringes/m-.degree. C. where the first term in Eq.
(2) provides the major contribution.
The temperature sensitivity of
gold-coated fiber 12 may also be determined experimentally by monitoring the
resistance change of the gold film 14 when heated by a steady current. The
temperature change is then calculated as
.DELTA.T=AR/Ry.sub.t (3)
Where .DELTA.R is the resistance change corresponding to a temperature
change .DELTA.T, R is the room temperature resistance, and y.sub.t is the
temperature coefficient of resistivity. A value for y.sub.t is determined
experimentally by placing gold layer 14 of fiber 12 in a furnace (not shown) and
monitoring the resistance as the temperature is increased. These experimental
results are then used to obtain the experimental temperature sensitivity of
.DELTA..phi./L.DELTA.T=15.9 fringes/m-.degree. C. (4)
The
experimental value is in reasonable agreement with the theoretical value, and is
the value used in the thermal conductivity analyses. The greatest experimental
uncertainty is the accurate determination of the coated length L of fiber 12. In
practice it is most convenient to calibrate the thermal conductivity sensor with
a fluid of known thermal conductivity; in the measurements discussed below, pure
ethylene glycol is taken as a standard with a thermal conductivity of
0.255W/m-.degree. C.
The experimental data are recorded as optical phase
changes .DELTA..phi. which are related to .DELTA.T through equation 4. A typical
plot of .DELTA.T versus time t for water is shown as curves 60,62 in FIG. 4,
wherein curve 60 represents the experimentally obtained response and curve 62
represents the calculated response. Curve 60 represents the average response to
one hundred consecutive one millisecond pulses. If gold-coated fiber 12 is
immersed in a fluid medium of lower thermal conductivity, the rise-time of curve
60 is shorter, the peak is higher and the decay time is longer. The peak value
of the temperature rise provides the most convenient measure of the thermal
conductivity; thus, the data presented below are obtained through measurement of
the peak heights.
An interpretation of the experimental data is provided
through a numerical solution of the heat conduction equation.
.iota..DELTA.T/.iota.t=k.gradient..sup.2 .DELTA.T+P/.rho.C.sub..rho.
A(5)
Where k=K/.rho.Cp is the diffusivity, K is the thermal
conductivity, C.sub.p is the specific heat at constant pressure, A is the
cross-sectional area of the heated region, P is the power applied to the fiber
per unit length, and .rho. is the density. An infinite length and circular
symmetry are assumed, and equation (5) is solved in two regions: the silica
fiber and the surrounding liquid medium whose thermal conductivity is to be
determined. The material properties .rho. and C.sub.p for both the fiber 12 and
the medium must be separately measured, obtained from the literature, or
determined by the present method. Equation (5) is replaced by a finite
difference equation which is solved using boundary conditions
.iota..DELTA.T/.iota.r=0 at r=0 and AT=0 at r=R and initial conditions
.DELTA.T=0. The outer radius R of the medium is taken to be much greater than
the thermal diffusion length for the time period employed in the calculation.
Gold coating 14 is assumed to have a negligible thickness and the power
dissipation in gold coating 14 is assumed to occur in the boundary region
between the fiber 12 and the fluid medium. The finite-difference approximations
yield a set of coupled first-order ordinary differential equations in the time
variable. These differential equations are then solved by the standard
Bulirsch-Stoer Method.
The entire .DELTA.T versus time curve is a
sensitive function of the material parameters. For example, a five micron change
in the fiber outer-diameter used in the calculations produces an easily
discernible change in the calculated curve 62. Thus the method of the present
invention may be used to determine the parameters of fiber 12 as well as the
properties of the liquid. The calculations for curve 62 are performed using a
handbook value of K.sub.silica = 1.34 W/m-.sup.o C, a value for generic silica.
A ten percent reduction of K.sub.silica to 1.21 W/m-.sup.o C makes the
calculated and experimental curves almost indistinguishable at the resolution
shown in FIG. 4.
Experimental results are presented for aqueous ethylene
glycol solutions. Handbook values of the density and specific heat and
literature values of the thermal conductivity are shown in Table 1.
TABLE 1
______________________________________
Solution Properties at 20.degree. C.
Concen-
tration Density Thermal
(Weight %
(kg/m.sup.3 .times.
Specific Heat Conductivity
eth.gly)
10.sup. -3)
(J/kg .degree.C. .times. 10.sup.-3)
(W/m-.degree. C.)
______________________________________
0 1.000 4.186 0.599
20 1.0241 3.906 0.508
40 1.0514 3.516 0.423
60 1.0765 3.119 0.356
80 1.0960 2.729 0.298
100 1.1130 2.344 0.255
______________________________________
The data given in Table 1 are used to calculate the maximum core
temperatures for an applied power of 5.90 W/m for the six solutions. The maximum
core temperatures are also measured for solutions of 0, 20, 40, 60, 80, and 100%
ethylene glycol by volume. The experimental and calculated results are shown as
points 72 and curve 70 respectively in FIG. 5. Similar agreement is obtained for
other power levels. Conversely, thermal conductivity cell 10 of the present
invention may be used to measure the concentration as well as the diffusivity
and other physical properties of a liquid.
Thermal conductivities may
also be determined for several ethylene glycol solutions using an optical fiber
thermal conductivity sensor such as thermal conductivity cell 10. A short-time
technique may be used wherein solution temperature changes of tenths of a degree
are produced. The classical hotwire approach uses heating times of longer
duration and produces larger temperature changes in the fluid being measured.
For this reason many corrections are required for accurate measurements. The
short-time approach eliminates these corrections but requires a more complex
numerical solution of heat conduction equation 5.
The heat capacity of
gold layer 14 itself has been ignored. This effect is most important at early
times and produces a temperature reduction of less than two percent for times
greater than one tenth of a millisecond. The second effect ignored is the
temperature non-uniformity of fiber 12. This effect is also most important at
early times and appears as a temperature increase of less than one percent of
peak value for the first couple tenths of a millisecond.
For well-known
fiber material parameters the present technique can determine (PC.sub.p) as well
as K for the medium. Equation (5) is invariant on multiplication of .DELTA.T and
(P/PC.sub.p A) by the same factor. Therefore, normalized plots of .DELTA.T
versus time will depend only on k.sub.medium (k.sub.medium
=K/PC.sub.p)=diffusivity. k.sub.medium can thus be obtained from the normalized
plots. Knowing k.sub.medium, P, and A, the peak height gives (PC.sub.p) which
can then be used to obtain K.sub.medium.
A gold-coated jacketed fiber 12
or a gold-coated unjacketed fiber 12 may be provided for conductivity cell 10 of
the present invention. Thermal conductivity cell 10 formed with a gold-coated
jacketed fiber 12 is more than twice as sensitive as gold-coated unjacketed
fiber 12.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate without any further
explanation that many modifications and variations are possible to the above
disclosed optical fiber sensor for measuring thermal conductivity embodiments,
within the concept of this invention. Consequently, it should be understood that
all such modifications and variations fall within the scope of the following
claims.
* * * * *
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