News & Analysis
/
Article

Microfiber Bragg grating-based acoustic sensor offers reduced size and electromagnetic immunity

SEP 24, 2018
Using orthogonally crossed micro-Co2+-doped optical fibers yields two-dimensional directional acoustic localization.
Microfiber Bragg grating-based acoustic sensor offers reduced size and electromagnetic immunity internal name

Microfiber Bragg grating-based acoustic sensor offers reduced size and electromagnetic immunity lead image

Acoustic sensors used for sound source localization (SSL) generally employ microphone arrays for detection, using sound pressure measurements to determine source direction. Many such devices have found inspiration in biology, with designs based on the aural organs of insects or lizards.

Other SSL devices measure acoustic particle velocity through temperature difference, indicated by resistance change in an electronic signal. These don’t suffer from the relatively large sizes typical of sensors that use pressure differentials, but they are subject to electromagnetic interference. Gao et al. now demonstrates a new all-fiber vector acoustic sensor less than 1.5 nanometers in size, capable of two-dimensional sound source localization and impervious to electromagnetic (EM) interference.

The sensor features two orthogonally crossed microfiber Bragg gratings, using parallel, micro-Co2+-doped optical fibers, which allow detection in a figure 8 pattern with 1.57 millivolts per degree orientation sensitivity. Experiments using a pump laser and the application of an acoustic wave tested the new device. The self-heating and asymmetric temperature changes in the Co2+-doped optical fibers provided direct measurements of acoustic particle velocity in the frequency range from 500 to 5,000 Hz.

The authors note that the greatly decreased size of this SSL sensor compared to microphone arrays and bio-inspired devices, along with its EM immunity, may make it suitable for broad applications including acoustic communication, pipeline monitoring, navigation, and other uses requiring small size and improved sensitivity.

Source: “Miniature all-fibre microflown directional acoustic sensor based on crossed self-heated micro-Co2+-doped optical fibre Bragg gratings,” by Ran Gao, Mengying Zhang, and Zhi-mei Qi, Applied Physics Letters (2018). The article can be accessed at https://doi.org/10.1063/1.5043519 .

Related Topics
More Science
APS
/
Article
A new computational method could help scientists understand the shapes of deformed nuclei from first principles.
AAS
/
Article
Across cosmic time, galaxies interact and merge with each other, causing disruptions in their behavior. Recent simulations explore the impacts interactions have on the star formation activity in interacting galaxies.
AAS
/
Article
Watch the bright Moon step past Mars, Castor, and Pollux. They bunch up on Sunday evening the 9th. Then on Tuesday and Wednesday, “full moon” spans two evenings.
/
Article
Simulations of radially closed parachutes reveal the flow dynamics of their advantageous structures