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| United States Patent |
5,367,175 |
| Bobb |
November 22, 1994 |
Method of measuring liquid level with a thermal interface
detection
Abstract
A method of measuring the position of a liquid surface within a vessel is
scribed. An optical fiber is provided which has first and second ends and has an
energy-absorbing element of a predetermined length disposed upon a portion of
the cladding thereof such that there is a thermal interface between the
energy-absorbing element and the cladding. The optical fiber is then positioned
in the vessel so that the energy-absorbing element disposed thereon extends a
known distance into the vessel along a known depth gradient of the vessel and so
that the energy-absorbing element will intersect the liquid surface over the
anticipated range of positions thereof. Single-frequency, coherent light is then
transmitted through the core of the optical fiber by launching it into the first
end of the optical fiber. A pulse of energy is applied across the entire length
of the energy-absorbing element to heat it, and then the transmitted light is
received from the second end of the optical fiber. The change in phase of the
transmitted light resulting from applying the pulse of energy is then measured,
and the position of the liquid surface is then determined in accordance with the
change in phase.
| Inventors: |
Bobb; Lloyd C. (Horsham, PA) |
| Assignee: |
The United States of America as represented
by the Secretary of the Navy (Washington, DC) |
| Appl. No.: |
159962 |
| Filed: |
November 24, 1993 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
250/577; 73/293; 250/227.14;
250/904 |
| Intern'l Class: |
G01N 015/06 |
| Field of Search: |
250/577,227.14,227.19,227.24,904
73/293,292 |
References Cited [Referenced
By]
U.S. Patent Documents
| 4287427 |
Sep., 1981 |
Scifres |
250/577. |
| 4891512 |
Jan., 1990 |
Naden |
250/227. |
| 5047626 |
Sep., 1991 |
Bobb et al. |
250/227. |
| 5115127 |
May., 1992 |
Bobb et al. |
250/227. |
| 5166988 |
Nov., 1992 |
Bobb et al. |
385/1. |
Primary
Examiner: Nelms; David C.
Assistant Examiner: Le; Que T.
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 manufactured and 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 is claimed is:
1. A method of measuring the position of a
liquid surface within a vessel, comprising the steps of:
providing an
optical fiber having first and second ends and having an energy-absorbing
element of a predetermined length disposed upon a portion of the cladding
thereof such that there is a thermal interface between the energy absorbing
element and the cladding;
positioning the optical fiber in the vessel so
that the energy absorbing element disposed thereon extends a known distance into
the vessel along a known depth gradient of the vessel and so that the
energy-absorbing element will intersect the liquid surface over the anticipated
range of positions thereof;
transmitting single-frequency, coherent
light through the core of the optical fiber by launching the light into the
first end of the optical fiber;
applying a pulse of energy across the
entire length of the energy-absorbing element to heat it;
receiving the
transmitted light from the second end of the optical fiber;
measuring
the change in phase of the transmitted light resulting from applying the pulse
of energy; and
determining the position of the liquid surface in
accordance with the change in phase.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein
the energy-absorbing element is composed of a conductive material, and the pulse
of energy applied to the energy-absorbing element is electrical energy.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the pulse of electrical energy is
applied to the energy-absorbing element by a voltage source electrically
connected to electrodes at each end of the energy-absorbing element.
4.
The method of claim 1, wherein the energy-absorbing element is a light-absorbing
material, and the pulse of energy applied to the energy-absorbing element is
light energy.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the pulse of light
energy is applied to the energy-absorbing element by launching light down the
cladding of the optical fiber towards the energy-absorbing element.
6.
The method of claim 4, wherein the energy-absorbing element is disposed upon the
outer surface of a portion of the cladding of the optical fiber.
7. The
method of claim 4, wherein the energy-absorbing element is disposed within the
cladding of the optical fiber.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the
known depth gradient of the vessel is transverse to the liquid surface.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein said step of measuring the change in
phase of the transmitted light resulting from applying the pulse of energy
further comprises the step of monitoring the signal output of an interferometer
which is maintained in quadrature in which the optical fiber having the
energy-absorbing element disposed thereon forms an arm thereof.
10. The
method of claim 9, wherein the interferometer is operated within an eighth of a
fringe of quadrature.
11. The method of claim 9, wherein the duration of
the pulse of energy applied across the entire length of the energy-absorbing
element is less than the response time of the optical fiber.
12. The
method of claim 11, wherein said step of monitoring the signal output of an
interferometer which is maintained in quadrature further comprises the step of
monitoring the signal output of the interferometer from the time the pulse of
energy is applied until the interferometer returns to quadrature, to form a
signal output waveform.
13. The method of claim 12, further comprising
the step of forming and averaging a plurality of signal output waveforms and
producing an average signal output waveform.
14. The method of claim 12,
wherein said step of determining the position of the liquid surface in
accordance with the change in phase further comprises the step of correlating
the signal output waveform to the fraction of the energy-absorbing element
surrounded by the liquid.
Description
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates
generally to a method of measuring the position of a liquid surface within a
vessel, and more particularly to a method of measuring liquid level using an
optical fiber sensor.
There are a variety of methods of measuring liquid
level, the most commonly-used non-fiber-optic methods being based on such
physical phenomena as buoyancy, capacitance, ultrasonic waves, and pressure
transmission.
Liquid level sensors based on buoyancy employ a buoyant
float which moves with changing liquid level. A mechanical linkage or magnetic
couple translates the float's up-and-down motion into a motion of a contact
which is either open or closed, indicating whether the liquid level is above or
below a specific level. Accuracy is typically limited to approximately a quarter
of an inch.
In the capacitance approach to measuring liquid level, an
electrode is installed in the vessel and the capacitance between this electrode
and the wall of the vessel is measured. Air has a dielectric constant of one and
the liquid has a greater dielectric constant. As the tank fills with the liquid,
the dielectric constant rises and therefore so does the capacitance. Therefore,
a measure of the capacitance of the vessel is an indication of the amount of
liquid present. Any change in the dielectric constant of the liquid will cause
an incorrect reading.
Ultrasonic techniques sense liquid level by
measuring the time it takes for a pulsed high-frequency sound wave to travel
from a transducer downward through the air at the top of the vessel, reflect off
the surface of the liquid and return to the sensor. Accuracy is typically
limited to about 0.25% of the full-scale reading. Ultrasonic sensors are not
reliable in the presence of surface foam, and their functioning may be impaired
by falling liquids, steam, and dense vapors and dust in the vessel.
Liquid level sensors based on pressure operate on the principle that the
pressure at the sensor increases directly with the depth of the water above it.
One such sensor is called a bubbler. In a bubbler, compressed air is forced down
a tube which runs to the bottom of the vessel at a pressure which will cause it
to bubble out of the end of the tube. That pressure is an indication of the
depth of the liquid above the end of the tube. One disadvantage of this sensor
is that the end of the tube can become clogged by the liquid.
Optical
fibers have been used in liquid level sensing. For example, point sensors work
on the principle of total internal reflection. Light is sent down an optical
fiber and the amount of light that gets reflected back from the end of that
fiber depends on whether or not the fiber end is in the liquid or above it. They
are also susceptible to contamination of the end of the fiber, and would not
work in any kind of liquid that could stick to the end of the fiber. A variation
of this type of sensor has a U-shaped fiber with the cladding stripped away from
the U-shaped portion. When the U-shaped portion of the fiber is immersed in the
liquid, and light is transmitted through the fiber, some of it is lost to the
liquid. Therefore, the amount of light that is received depends on whether the
U-shaped portion of the fiber is in or above the liquid. Both of these sensors
have the limitation that they merely tell you whether the liquid level is above
or below a specific level.
A differential absorption optical fiber
liquid level sensor uses a two-wavelength ratiometric approach to cancel out
errors arising from variations in fuel characteristics and tank vibrations. It
uses inexpensive LED sources and a multimode optical fiber and can have a 2-mm
resolution over an 18-cm range. The sensor also has the advantage that only a
transparent window is needed to look up through the liquid to measure the
transmission through the liquid, making the method non-contact and therefore not
subject to surface contamination or surface wetting of the optical surfaces. A
disadvantage of this sensor is that if the absorption characteristics of the
liquid are temperature-dependent, then the reading must be adjusted for that
property. Of course, it will not work on liquids which do not transmit light.
Another optical fiber sensor is based on the continuation of the
transmission through a bent fiber. Fibers formed with reversed curvatures of
decreasing radii will induce an increasing amount of lower-mode light loss to
the cladding as the light propagates along the multimode fiber. The sensor is
arranged in the fluid in a vertical orientation so that the light travels along
the fiber from the bottom or low point of the fluid to the top or the full
point. As the fluid covers increasing lengths of the exposed fiber, it strips
ever more power from the cladding. Data taken with this sensor show a monotonic
decrease of output intensity as a function of increasing fluid level. This
sensor has an accuracy of a few centimeters.
Crosstalk between two
multimode optical fibers has also been used to sense liquid level. The cladding
is removed from a portion of each of the fibers to expose their cores, and then
they are aligned so that the exposed cores are adjacent to each other. Light is
propagated through one the fibers. When liquid is present in the region between
the cores light will couple from the one fiber into the other. This sensor is
very accurate over a limited range. The disadvantages are that it is very
susceptible to contamination and it will only work with a limited range of
liquids which have the right index of refraction. Also, the amount of coupling
changes as the index of refraction changes, which happens with temperature,
requiring that the sensor be temperature-compensated.
A digital optical
fiber liquid level sensor operates on the selective coupling at the liquid
surface between a source waveguide and an array of digitally masked receiving
waveguides. The receiving waveguides carry optical high-low signals to a remote
detector in a discriminator circuit. This sensor is capable of liquid level
resolution to several millimeters and it can operate over a total range of
liquid levels of several meters. This sensor also depends on the index of
refraction of the medium.
A high-precision remote liquid level
measurement can be made using a combination of optical radar and optical fibers.
This technique is similar to the ultrasonic technique in which liquid level is
measured by measuring the length of time it takes for radiation to travel the
distance from the source to the surface and back to a detector. This distance
measurement is made using the technique of optical radar in which the phase of
an amplitude-modulated lightwave reflected from a remote target is compared with
that of the original phase of the launched beam. This technique enables
measurements to be made ranging from 0.1 m to 5 m with an accuracy of about 1 mm
throughout the range. This system has all the advantages of the non-contact
techniques that were described previously. Its readings are adversely affected
by foam and the presence of particles or droplets between the source and the
surface that would cause reflections.
It can be seen that a need exists
for a highly accurate, depth-continuous method of measuring liquid level which
can be used in a corrosive environment, has no moving parts within the
liquid-containing vessel, can be used with a variety of liquids, is insensitive
to such liquid properties as index of refraction, dielectric constant,
absorption characteristics, and light transmissivity, operates in the presence
of foam and various contaminants, and functions even when the liquid surface is
not horizontal
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is a general object
of the present invention to provide a method of measuring the position of a
liquid surface in a vessel.
It is a more specific object of the present
invention to provide a highly accurate method of measuring liquid level using an
optical fiber.
It is yet another object of the present invention to
provide a method of measuring the position of a liquid surface in a vessel,
which method is depth-continuous and does not depend on gravity to function and
can therefore measure the position of a liquid surface in a vessel even when the
surface is not horizontal, as in a syringe.
It is still another object
to provide a method of measuring liquid level which can be used in a corrosive
environment and can function in the presence of foam and various contaminants.
It is also an object of the present invention to provide such a method
which operates independently of such characteristics of the liquid as its
dielectric constant, its absorption characteristics, its light transmissibility,
and its index of refraction.
These and other objects are accomplished by
a method of measuring the position of a liquid surface within a vessel, in which
an optical fiber is provided which has first and second ends and has an
energy-absorbing element of a predetermined length disposed upon a portion of
the cladding thereof such that there is a thermal interface between the
energy-absorbing element and the cladding. The optical fiber is then positioned
in the vessel so that the energy-absorbing element disposed thereon extends a
known distance into the vessel along a known depth gradient of the vessel and so
that the energy-absorbing element will intersect the liquid surface over the
anticipated range of positions thereof. Single-frequency, coherent light is then
transmitted through the core of the optical fiber by launching it into the first
end of the optical fiber. A pulse of energy is applied across the entire length
of the energy-absorbing element to heat it, and then the transmitted light is
received from the second end of the optical fiber. The change in phase of the
transmitted light resulting from applying the pulse of energy is then measured,
and the position of the liquid surface is then determined in accordance with the
change in phase.
Other objects, advantages, and novel features of the
invention will become apparent from the following detailed description of the
invention when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a schematic representation
of apparatus for use in the liquid-level measuring method of the present
invention.
FIG. 2 is a more-detailed schematic representation of the
vessel shown in FIG. 1.
FIG. 3 is a plot of the output of the
interferometer of FIG. 1 versus time for a given fixed liquid level, averaged
over approximately 50 heating pulses of the optical fiber.
FIG. 4 is a
plot of the average peak interferometer output versus time for a range of liquid
levels measured according to the present invention.
FIG. 5 is a
schematic representation of apparatus for use in an alternate embodiment of the
liquid-level measuring method of the present invention.
DESCRIPTION OF
THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
Referring now to the drawings wherein like
characters designate like or corresponding parts throughout the several views,
there is shown in FIG. 1 a schematic diagram of a configuration for carrying out
the method of the present invention. A vessel 10, shown in more detail in
schematic FIG. 2, containing liquid 12 of unknown depth (including the
possibility of being empty) has an optical fiber 14 positioned to extend
therein. Optical fiber 14, which is preferably a single-mode optical fiber for
propagating coherent, single-frequency light therethrough, has a core through
which the light can propagate, a cladding and a non-stripping jacket.
Optical fiber 14 has disposed thereon an energy-absorbing element 16 of
a known, predetermined length based on the range of anticipated liquid levels.
Energy-absorbing element 16 is disposed on the cladding such that there is a
thermal interface therebetween. The jacket is preferably removed from the
portion of the cladding which has element 16 disposed thereon for this purpose.
In the embodiment shown in FIGS. 1 and 2, energy-absorbing element 16 is a thin
layer formed of a conductive material such as gold for absorbing electrical
energy. Keeping the thermal mass of element 16 to a minimum saves energy and
shortens the thermal response time; therefore, element 16 should preferably be a
thin coating (on the order of 1000 angstroms or 0.1 micron thick) of the kind
achievable using vacuum deposition, chemical vapor deposition, or sputtering.
The gold layer may surround the entire circumference along a length of optical
fiber 14. Element 16 may be overcoated with a thin plastic layer to isolate the
element from the liquid or gas, if desired.
Optical fiber 14 is
positioned in vessel 10 so that energy-absorbing element 16 extends a known
distance into the vessel along a known depth gradient of the vessel. Optical
fiber 14 should be positioned so that energy-absorbing element 16 will intersect
the liquid surface over the range of anticipated positions thereof. If an empty
reading is to be measurable, element 16 should extend to the bottom of vessel
10. This positioning may be accomplished as shown in FIG. 2, with a rod 18 made
of non-conductive material such as delrin or fiberglass and sized to be long
enough to span the range of anticipated positions of the liquid surface. Rod 18
is positioned accordingly, and along a known depth gradient, preferably
perpendicular to the surface, and may be held in place by being fixed at one end
thereof to a lid 20 on vessel 10. Rod 18 has two fasteners 22a and 22b of
conductive material such as copper fixed thereto for holding optical fiber 14 in
an extended and straight position parallel thereto, but not in contact
therewith. Fasteners 22a and 22b are fixed, for example by conductive epoxy or
low-temperature solder, to energy-absorbing element 16 at each of its two ends,
and act as electrical contacts for conducting electricity thereto via fastener
wires 24a and 24 b. Lid 20 has holes appropriately positioned for passage
therethrough of optical fiber 14 and fastener wires 24a and 24b.
A
pulsed voltage source 26 is electrically connected via wires 24a and 24b to
fasteners 22a and 22b to supply a series of electrical pulses of a given energy
level and known short duration to energy-absorbing element 16 along its entire
length, to repeatedly momentarily heat it. Some of this heat transfers to
optical fiber 14, and some transfers to the surrounding medium. More heat
transfers to the surrounding medium when the medium is liquid than when the
medium is gas, and when more heat transfers to the surrounding medium, less heat
transfers to optical fiber 14. Therefore, when the surrounding medium is liquid,
less heat transfers to optical fiber 14 than when the surrounding medium is gas.
The amount of heat transferring to optical fiber 14 is thus proportional to the
amount of gas surrounding element 16. Therefore, by measuring the amount of heat
transferring to optical fiber 14, one can determine the relative amounts of
liquid and gas that are surrounding element 16, thereby allowing one to measure
the relative position of the liquid surface or liquid level.
Heat
transferred to the fiber heats the fiber's core. One can measure the amount of
heat transferring to the core of optical fiber 14 by launching coherent,
single-frequency light from a coherent light source 28, such as a
single-frequency helium-neon laser, into one end of the optical fiber so that it
propagates through the core thereof, and measuring the change in phase of the
light which occurs as a result of the optical fiber being heated. The phase of
the light propagating through an optical fiber of length L is given by
.phi.=2.pi.nL/.lambda. where n is the effective refractive index, which may be
approximated by the refractive index of the core of the optical fiber, and
.lambda. is the wavelength of the light in free space. A change in the optical
fiber's temperature T (as in when it is heated) results in a proportionate phase
shift .DELTA..phi. of the light in the optical fiber because of the
temperature-induced change in the refractive index n of the core of the optical
fiber, the change in the length L of the waveguide due to thermal expansion, and
the photoelastic effect.
The change in phase of the light can be
measured by using any of a variety of optical fiber interferometers. A two-fiber
interferometer such as a Mach-Zehnder interferometer 30, for example, may be
used to observe the interference which occurs between the light propagating
through optical fiber 14 and light from the same source 28 which propagates
through a reference optical fiber 32, which is unaffected by the temperature
change. Coherent light source 28 is coupled through a beam splitter 34, such as
an optical fiber coupler, to launch substantially identical light beams A and A'
through the cores of optical fiber 14 and reference optical fiber 32, which
forms the other arm of interferometer 30. The light beams A and A' from optical
fibers 14 and 32 are combined to interfere at a combiner 36, such as an optical
fiber coupler. The combined light then exits combiner 36 as two beams B and B'
via exit optical fibers 38a and 38b to be collected by photodiodes 40a and 40b
which convert the light beams B and B' to electrical signals C and C' which are
proportional to the intensities of beams B and B'. A differential amplifier 42
receives and compares electrical signals C and C' from photodiodes 40a and 40b
and produces an electrical signal D which is proportional to the difference in
intensities of beams B and B' through exit optical fibers 38a and 38b. The
difference in intensities of beams B and B' is indicative of the relative phase
of the beams A and A' through optical fibers 14 and 32. Signal D therefore
indicates the phase shift which has occurred as a result of optical fiber 14
being heated by the energy pulses.
Signal D from differential amplifier
42 is applied to a quadrature-maintaining means 44 such as a locking amplifier
46 connected to a PZT fiber stretcher 48 to lock interferometer 30 in
quadrature. Other quadrature-maintaining means may be used as well.
Quadrature-maintaining means 44 should have a response time which is fast enough
to compensate for room temperature variations yet slow enough that the short
heating pulse is not compensated for.
Interferometer 30 should be
operated in the region in which there is a linear relationship between the fiber
core's temperature and the output signal D. This region is within an eighth of a
fringe of quadrature. To keep interferometer 30 operating in this region, the
amount of temperature-rise of the fiber's core must be controlled, which is
accomplished by controlling the energy in the heating pulse. The voltage level
of pulsed voltage source 26 should be adjusted until the desired fringe shift is
obtained. The appropriate voltage level will depend on the resistance of
energy-absorbing element 16, which in turn is based on the particular conductive
material chosen, its thickness, and its length. The duration of the heating
pulse should be less than the thermal response time of the fiber, which is the
time required for heat applied to the outer surface of the fiber to reach the
core, and is an inherent characteristic of the fiber. A pulse duration of less
than 1 msec is preferred. The delay between pulses should be long enough to
allow interferometer 30 to return to quadrature.
Signal D from
differential amplifier 42 is also recorded and stored by a signal analyzer 50,
which may be, for example, an HP 3651A Signal Analyzer. Pulsed voltage source 26
provides a trigger pulse to signal analyzer 50 to signal it to record a waveform
for each heating pulse applied to optical fiber 14. Signal analyzer 50 captures
and stores each waveform and then may average them in groups of approximately 50
to reduce significantly the background noise, if desired. Output from signal
analyzer 50 is then plotted by a plotter 52. Signal D from differential
amplifier 42 is also sent to an oscilloscope 54 which is also triggered by
pulsed voltage source 26 for displaying each individual waveform.
It is
convenient to use the peak temperature reached by the core of optical fiber 14
for each pulse (or group of pulses if averaging), which correlates to the peak
of the corresponding waveform, as the value to correlate with the liquid level.
Of course, plotter 52 may be set to plot only the peak values, which can be
calibrated to represent liquid level.
The method of the present
invention was demonstrated using as optical fiber 14 an ITT Type T-1601
single-mode optical fiber having a four-micron diameter silica core, a
forty-micron outside diameter B.sub.2 O.sub.3 -doped silica cladding, and an
eighty-five micron outside diameter silica substrate. A one-inch section of the
optical fiber had disposed thereon a gold coating 1000 angstroms thick with a
resistance of 11.7 ohms. The optical fiber was immersed in water the depth of
which was varied. Pulsed voltage source 26 applied an electrical pulse of 1.4
volts and one millisecond in duration to the gold coating via electrically
conductive fasteners 22a and 22b. Quadrature-maintaining means 44 had a response
time of several hundred milliseconds, so that the one-millisecond heating pulses
were not phase-compensated. A Mach-Zehnder interferometer was used. One
resulting waveform representing an average of 50 waveforms from plotter 52 is
shown in FIG. 3 for a water level of 6 mm. A plot of the peak signal (mV) vs.
water level (mm) for a series of heating pulses and water levels is given in
FIG. 4. From this plot the water level was determinable to within less than 1
mm.
In another embodiment, shown in FIG. 5, energy-absorbing element 16
is a light-absorbing element. Pulsed voltage source 26 provides voltage to a
light energy source 56, such as a laser diode, which provides a pulse of light
energy to energy-absorbing element 16. Light-absorbing element 16 may be
composed of any material which is capable of absorbing a preselected wavelength
band of light and generating heat in response thereto and which is capable of
thermally interfacing with optical fiber 14, either on or within the cladding.
Thin metallic films such as gold, known absorbers such as carbon black, and even
pigment, as from a water-proof marking pen, are effective materials for
disposing on the cladding. The amount of the circumference of the cladding which
is covered by light-absorbing element 16 may vary. One convenient embodiment is
to dispose light-absorbing element 16 around the entire circumference of the
cladding. Energy-absorbing element 16 may be overcoated with gold or any other
inert material to protect it from the liquid, if desired.
Alternatively,
light-absorbing element 16 may be diffused into the cladding of optical fiber 14
around the entire circumference thereof. In this embodiment, light-absorbing
element 16 may be any of a variety of metal atoms which are absorbers and which
are capable of being diffused into glass, such as neodymium. As with the coating
embodiment, the circumferential amount of cladding which is diffused with
light-absorbing material may vary.
Pulsed voltage source 26 supplies
pulses of electrical energy to light energy source 56, which is coupled to
launch pulses of light into the cladding of optical fiber 14 in the direction of
element 16 via a multimode fiber 58. Pulsed voltage source 26 also provides
trigger pulses to signal analyzer 50 and oscilloscope 54, as in the previous
embodiment. The location on optical fiber 14 where light is coupled into the
cladding should be between light-absorbing element 16 and photodiodes 40a and
40b so that light from source 56 propagates through the cladding in a direction
which is away from the photodiodes. Those skilled in the optical arts are aware
of means for coupling light into the cladding of a fiber so that it will remain
in the cladding only and propagate in the desired direction. One technique is to
fix multimode fiber 58 to optical fiber 14 along a small portion of the length
of each, oriented in such a way that the light, when coupled into the cladding,
will continue to propagate in the same direction, towards element 16. Multimode
fiber 58 may be fixed to optical fiber 14 by removing the cladding from a
portion of the multimode fiber and bonding that portion to a portion of the
optical fiber from which the jacket has been removed. Bonding can be achieved
either with index gel, or by fusing the portions together with heat while
stretching multimode fiber 58 and optical fiber 14. To ensure that the light
launched into the cladding reaches light-absorbing element 16 without being
stripped away enroute, the jacket should be made of a material, such as silicone
resin, which has a lower index of refraction than the cladding.
The
wavelength band of light energy source 56 must be one which is readily
transmitted by multimode fiber 58 and optical fiber 14. A constant amount of
light energy should preferably be deposited per unit length of light-absorbing
element 16. This can be achieved by tailoring the absorption profile or
attenuation length of element 16, by increasing the amount of surface area of
the cladding which has light-absorbing element 16 disposed thereon with
increasing distance from the point where light is coupled into the cladding.
Alternatively, the wavelength bands of light energy source 56 and element 16 can
be selected so that only a small portion of the light power which reaches the
element is absorbed thereby. In this case, the power of the light propagating
through the cladding does not drop off significantly as it proceeds through the
portion having element 16 connected thereto.
The energy of the heating
pulse is controlled by adjusting the voltage level of pulsed voltage source 26
and the energy output of light energy source 56 until the desired fringe shift
is obtained, as discussed in connection with the previous embodiment. The
appropriate energy output of light energy source 56 will be based on the
absorption characteristics of the particular material used for the
energy-absorbing element. The duration of the heating pulse should be less than
the thermal response time of the fiber, preferably 1 msec or less. In all other
respects this embodiment is the same as the previously-described embodiment.
Some of the many advantages of the present invention should now be
readily apparent. For instance, a highly accurate method of measuring the
position of a liquid surface in a vessel has been provided. Furthermore, the
method is depth-continuous and does not depend on gravity to function, allowing
one to measure the position of a liquid surface in a vessel even when the
surface is not horizontal. The method also operates independently of such
characteristics of the liquid as its dielectric constant, its absorption
characteristics, its light transmissibility, and its index of refraction.
Additionally, the method can be used in a corrosive environment and at elevated
temperatures and pressures. Finally, there are no moving parts within the
liquid-containing vessel.
Those skilled in the art will appreciate
without any further explanation that many modifications and variations are
possible to the above disclosed method of measuring liquid level, 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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