Stretchable distributed fiber-optic sensors

Science ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 370 (6518) ◽  
pp. 848-852
Author(s):  
Hedan Bai ◽  
Shuo Li ◽  
Jose Barreiros ◽  
Yaqi Tu ◽  
Clifford R. Pollock ◽  
...  

Silica-based distributed fiber-optic sensor (DFOS) systems have been a powerful tool for sensing strain, pressure, vibration, acceleration, temperature, and humidity in inextensible structures. DFOS systems, however, are incompatible with the large strains associated with soft robotics and stretchable electronics. We develop a sensor composed of parallel assemblies of elastomeric lightguides that incorporate continuum or discrete chromatic patterns. By exploiting a combination of frustrated total internal reflection and absorption, stretchable DFOSs can distinguish and measure the locations, magnitudes, and modes (stretch, bend, or press) of mechanical deformation. We further demonstrate multilocation decoupling and multimodal deformation decoupling through a stretchable DFOS–integrated wireless glove that can reconfigure all types of finger joint movements and external presses simultaneously, with only a single sensor in real time.

2010 ◽  
Vol 30 (6) ◽  
pp. 1603-1607 ◽  
Author(s):  
许海燕 Xu Haiyan ◽  
徐锲 Xu Qie ◽  
肖倩 Xiao Qian ◽  
张毅 Zhang Yi ◽  
贾波 Jia Bo

2019 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin (Wenhai) Li ◽  
Michel Gaudet

Abstract A method to monitor the mechanical behavior and identify crack location and growth in a concrete structure element using a distributed fiber optic sensor (FOS) system is demonstrated experimentally by testing concrete specimens in four-point bending. The sensor system consisted of an optical frequency domain reflectometry (OFDR) interrogator unit paired with an all-grating sensing fiber that was bonded to the surface of the concrete test specimen. Strain measurements with high spatial resolution of <10 mm were obtained at various points along a single fiber cable. Large strain values at the crack locations indicated strain concentrations that could be used to assess the crack growth. The distributed sensing system demonstrated the capability to detect localized, early stage cracks, with crack width smaller than 0.1 mm, well before they become observable by visual inspection.


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