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Review

A Brief Review of Specialty Optical Fibers for Brillouin-Scattering-Based Distributed Sensors

1
Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
2
Department of Materials Science and Chemistry, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29631, USA
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2018, 8(10), 1996; https://doi.org/10.3390/app8101996
Submission received: 13 September 2018 / Revised: 17 October 2018 / Accepted: 17 October 2018 / Published: 20 October 2018
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Optical Correlation-domain Distributed Fiber Sensors)

Abstract

:
Specialty optical fibers employed in Brillouin-based distributed sensors are briefly reviewed. The optical and acoustic waveguide properties of silicate glass optical fiber first are examined with the goal of constructing a designer Brillouin gain spectrum. Next, materials and their effects on the relevant Brillouin scattering properties are discussed. Finally, optical fiber configurations are reviewed, with attention paid to fibers for discriminative or other enhanced sensing configurations. The goal of this brief review is to reinforce the importance of fiber design to distributed sensor systems, generally, and to inspire new thinking in the use of fibers for this sensing application.

1. Introduction

In comparison to the available configurations for distributed fiber sensing, those that are Brillouin scattering-based appear to offer somewhat superior spatial resolution with a long sensor reach [1]. However, despite several such appealing advantages, they have captured (and are expected to capture) only a marginal share of the total commercial distributed fiber sensor market [2]. While application requirements certainly lead one’s choosing the most appropriate sensor type, relative cost, without doubt, is a recognized disadvantage for Brillouin-based systems [3]. Hence, in response came the development of new system architectures, including Brillouin optical correlation domain reflectometry (BOCDR) [4,5]. Nevertheless, the mundane commonality among nearly all Brillouin-based systems, whether for reasons of cost, convenience, or ubiquity, is the use of standard (i.e., telecommunications) single mode fiber as the key sensing element.
There are a wide variety of very good reviews that focus on, or include a discussion of, Brillouin-based distributed sensing systems for numerous applications [1,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15]. Most of these focus on the system architecture. However, as discussed here, there is an emerging body of work focusing on fiber design as a path towards system simplification and improvement. A subset of these even focus on novel materials, for example to realize fibers with custom thermo-mechanical response. The purpose of this paper is to offer a brief review of some of these novel fiber configurations, with a focus on the importance of the enabling material in these approaches. While Brillouin scattering has been studied in micro-structured fiber [16,17,18,19,20], and non-silicate systems, including phosphate [21], tellurite [22], ZBLAN [23], and chalcogenide (As2Se3 [24,25] and As2S3 [25]) glasses, this review will focuse on solid singly- or multiply-clad, circular-geometry fibers in silicate glass systems. Such configurations offer the best compatibility with conventional components and fiber fabrication processes.
Ultimately, it is the hope of the authors that this brief review will serve to (at least partly) reinforce the importance of, and need for, fiber and material design in distributed sensor systems, generally. This paper is written from the perspective of fiber makers and designers, and therefore new system-level analyses (such as sensitivity, sensor configurations, etc.) are not considered. Rather, without prejudice toward any one approach, and with apologies to those not described herein, a wide variety of fiber technologies are described with the hopes of inspiring novel thinking with regard to distributed sensor systems based on Brillouin scattering. That said, the remainder of this paper is arranged as follows. The next section focuses on the waveguide properties of the optical fiber, both acoustic and optical, and, from that, other basic features, such as the Brillouin gain spectrum, are formulated. After that, a discussion of materials, both more and less common, is provided, with some focus on the fiber thermo-mechanical response. This, then, leads into a discussion of tailored fiber configurations and concomitant sensing approaches, with some focus on discriminative sensing. Finally, the paper concludes with a few closing remarks and future perspectives.

2. The Waveguide

Optical fiber has gained the status of omnipresence in the modern, technologically-connected world. Even for those without scientific training, the operating principle behind optical fiber can intuitively be understood. Indeed, more than 150 years ago, John Tyndall left an indelible mark with his public lectures demonstrating the guidance of light through a laminar flow of water [26]. Most school children in a science class have witnessed some form of this demonstration, and the notion of total internal reflection (TIR) and guidance can conceptually be understood through observation. Although calculations of modes, propagation constants, dispersion coefficients, etc. mathematically are somewhat more complex [27], the simple ray propagation picture suffices to illustratively explain how a thin strand of glass can propagate a signal with losses now as low as 0.14 dB/km [28]. As Kao and Hockham predicted, however, this achievement largely has been enabled by materials science and engineering [29].
An optical fiber is described by its refractive index profile (RIP). Figure 1 shows an example of a very simple RIP for a conventional, step-index optical fiber. The central part of the structure, the core, guides light. Its refractive index (ncore) is greater than that of the cladding (nclad), therefore satisfying the main requirement for TIR. The cladding diameter (2b, typically 125 μm as a standard for telecommunications fiber) is considered to be infinite in most mathematical treatments of the fiber. It is coated with a buffer material, serving both to provide mechanical strength to the fiber, and to provide filtering/removal of any light propagating in the cladding due to scattering, bending, or other losses attributable to optical coupling at interfaces. Hence, the buffer usually has a refractive index higher than that of the cladding. Such a structure has perfect guidance, whose propagation constants are purely real-valued.
Within this structure, the optical wave interacts with one or more acoustic waves, forming the basis for Brillouin scattering in optical fiber. Therefore, it is the optical mode, its effective index (determined from the propagation constant), and its spatial distribution in the fiber (or in other words, how the mode overlaps with different regions of the waveguide) that give rise to the measurements made in the process of distributed sensing. The modes are calculated by solving Maxwell’s Wave Equation subject to the boundary conditions in cylindrical symmetry [30] in the usual way. The effective area, relating to the field intensity, is given by
A e f f = ( 0 2 π 0 r E ( r , θ ) E * ( r , θ ) d r d θ ) 2 0 2 π 0 r ( E ( r , θ ) E * ( r , θ ) ) 2 d r d θ  
where E(r,θ) is the electric field distribution (in the radial and azimuthal directions) and E*(r,θ) is the complex conjugate. Intensity is particularly important as it sets the absolute gain in a nonlinear process such as Brillouin scattering.
Brillouin scattering typically manifests as an interaction between the optical wave and a longitudinal-type sound (or pressure) wave. The interaction itself arises from axially-periodic perturbations to the permittivity due to the pressure associated with the sound wave. It is governed by the Bragg condition λ a = λ o / 2 n e f f where λa is the acoustic wavelength, λo is the vacuum optical wavelength, and neff is the effective index of the optical mode. The acoustic wavelength also may be expressed in terms of the acoustic velocity, Va, via V a = λ a ν a where νa is the frequency of the acoustic wave (in the hypersonic range). It is important to recognize that the optical and acoustic wavelengths are of comparable magnitude (indeed, only a factor of 2 between them). As such, the optical fiber would naturally be expected to exhibit acoustic waveguide effects. This would then suggest that Va should be considered to be the phase velocity of the acoustic mode.
Thus, similar to the optical RIP, a radial profile can be identified that describes the acoustic waveguide. Usually, the acoustic velocity itself serves in this capacity (vertical scale in Figure 1), but an “acoustic index” also may be utilized. Usually, this is defined as the cladding acoustic velocity divided by the material acoustic velocity in the radial direction [31]. Therefore, similar to the optical waveguide, the core should have an acoustic index that is greater than that of the cladding to satisfy some analogous TIR in the acoustic realm. Logically, since the acoustic wave is key to the sensing mechanism, one may quickly conclude that guiding them might somehow improve system performance.
With this in mind, the fiber possesses two important profiles: (1) the optical RIP; and (2) the acoustic velocity profiles. Jen et al. [32] describes a procedure by which, depending on the dopants used (in silica), a glass fibers’ optical and acoustic profiles may independently be designed. In other words, one can realize, for example, a fiber that guides optical waves, but is anti-guiding to acoustic waves. More complicated structures, such as fibers with cores whose optical index or acoustic velocity vary in the radial direction, also become possible. As a result, charts such as that shown in Table 1 typically are used to show the effects of the dopant on the optical (no) or acoustic (na) index of the silicate glass. They assist in the selection of materials for a specific fiber design. Interestingly, in Table 1, all but alumina raise the acoustic index (reduce the acoustic velocity). Only recently has it been confirmed in fiber form that both MgO [33] and Li2O [34] act in a manner similar to alumina, in raising the acoustic velocity when added to silica. An extensive study on these and several other relevant acoustic properties can be found in [35]. The next section provides additional details regarding the material and enumerate of the effects of the various dopants.
Determination of the acoustic phase velocity (or the acoustic modes), therefore, requires solving an acoustic wave equation subject to the relevant boundary conditions. The acoustic waves obey a damped wave equation given by [36,37]
ρ u ¨ ¯ [ c ¯ ¯ ¯ u + η ¯ ¯ ¯ u ˙ ] = 1 2 ¯ [ γ ¯ ¯ E k E l ]  
where the electrostrictive coefficients are given by a fourth rank tensor in γ ¯ ¯ , the damping term, η ¯ ¯ , is a tensor of rank four, and c ¯ ¯ is the rank-four elastic modulus tensor. u is the displacement field (and u ˙ is its time derivative) associated with the sound wave and can take on values in any of the directions in cylindrical coordinates. Thomas et al. [38] provided a detailed mathematical and experimental analysis of the scattering of light waves from acoustic modes of an optical fiber whose cladding velocity is less than that of the core (acoustically anti-guiding, pure silica core with a borosilicate cladding). Roughly 10 years later, Jen and colleagues [39,40,41] offered thorough mathematical analyses of fibers configured to be acoustically guiding. It was about the same time that Shibata et al. [42,43] made some of the first observations of multi-peaked Brillouin spectra, which they attributed to the presence of multiple guided acoustic modes.
The scattering integral that ultimately provides the strength of the Brillouin interaction is [38]
  D p , q = V o l E p * δ ε p , q E q d V  
where p,q = r,φ, z are the cylindrical coordinates, E is the electric field, and δε are the dielectric perturbations resulting from the pressure wave (or strain field). The relevant dielectric perturbations (δεp,q) are functions of the acoustic strain fields (Sp,q) and are given by [38,43]
δ ε r r = ε 0 n o 4 ( p 11 S r r + p 12 S ϕ ϕ + p 12 S z z )  
δ ε ϕ ϕ = ε 0 n o 4 ( p 11 S ϕ ϕ + p 12 S r r + p 12 S z z )  
δ ε ϕ r = ε 0 n o 4 2 p 44 S ϕ r  
where ε 0 is the permittivity of free space and the pijs are the usual photoelastic coefficients of the material. The generalized form of the acoustic strain field can be written as a function of the displacement vector [36,37]
S p q = 1 2 ( u q p + u p q ) .
The displacement vector now remains to be found. In the case of the fiber structure of Figure 1, the cladding is taken to be infinite and so there is one boundary at r = a. To determine the acoustic propagation constant(s), the boundary conditions are applied to assumed solutions (u(r,φ,z)) of the wave equations (Bessel functions in this case). In the case of the acoustic waveguide, there are four boundary conditions. First, the displacement vector must be continuous at any interface. Second, the two shear stresses at the interface and the normal compressional stress must be continuous at any boundary. These can be found mathematically listed in [44]. Once the propagation constants are determined by solving the characteristic matrix equation, they can be utilized to determine the spatial distribution of the displacement vector for the subsequent analysis. Similar, more recent approaches to calculating the longitudinal acoustic modes of an optical fiber can be found in several places [44,45,46].
The solutions to the wave equation are acoustic modes that have radial, longitudinal, and azimuthal components [38]. The fundamental optical mode in the fiber is azimuthally-symmetric, and therefore will have greatest overlap with azimuthally-symmetric acoustic modes. Shibata et al. [43] identified these as axial-radial modes R0m, but which are dominated by the longitudinal component (L0m). Nevertheless, the presence of these radial wave components causes the propagation constants, even in acoustically guiding fibers, to be complex-valued (unlike with the optical waves). Simply put, the wave phase velocity exceeds the shear velocity in both the core and cladding; the Bessel functions become complex (Hankel) functions in the cladding (by assuming that it is infinite in extent), giving rise to radiation, or leaky, modes [39]. The complex propagation constant can be expressed as β = k a j γ w g and, therefore, a z-propagating displacement field will take the form u ~ ~ e j β z = e γ w g z e j k a z , possessing an attenuation term associated with the radiation of acoustic energy. In the case of acoustically guiding fibers, this additional attenuation term is far less in magnitude than the intrinsic (viscoelastic) material damping loss and can be neglected. Interestingly, should the density and shear velocity values be the same in the core and cladding, the waveguide loss term vanishes [39]. Making this approximation can then simplify the mathematical analysis to some extent. In the case of acoustically anti-guiding fibers, the longitudinal wave also becomes leaky (again assuming an infinite cladding) and can contribute waveguide loss comparable to, or even much larger than [47] that of the material [44]. As discussed below, this acts to broaden the Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS) and reduce the peak gain coefficient; potentially undesirable characteristics for some distributed sensor applications.
Ultimately, the determination (or design) of the BGS is the desired outcome. Therefore, once the components of the displacement vector are known, the scattering amplitude can be determined. Using similar modal symmetry arguments as above, the analyses in [38,40,42] show that the dominant scattering term arises from the p12Szz contribution. Therefore, the scattering integral in Equation (3) can be replaced by a simplified (and normalized) overlap integral taking the form [48]
Γ m 1 / 2 = 0 E * ( r ) u z , 0 m ( r ) E ( r ) r d r ( 0 | u z , 0 m ( r ) | 2 r d r ) ( 0 | E ( r ) | 4 r d r ) .  
Owing to the simple exponential decay of the acoustic wave, a BGS possesses the natural (or Lorentzian) lineshape [49], with the possibility of multiple overlapping peaks given the presence of multiple acoustic modes possessing non-zero overlap with the optical field [42]. The scattered intensity is proportional to Γm [38], and, therefore, the BGS can be calculated by the following
B G S = m g B ( ν a 0 m ) ( Δ ν B 0 m / 2 ) 2 ( ν ν a 0 m ) 2 + ( Δ ν B 0 m / 2 ) 2 Γ m  
where ΔνB is the spectral width of the mode, which possesses contributions from both material damping and acoustic waveguide-based losses. As previously stated, the waveguide part can be neglected for typical acoustically-guiding fiber. gB is the Brillouin gain coefficient, which possesses a number of material parameters, including the photoelastic constant, p12, which is dropped from the normalized overlap integral, and given by [49]
g B ( ν B ) = 2 π n 7 p 12 2 c λ o 2 ρ V a Δ ν B  
with all the material properties previously defined, except for the mass density, ρ. In general, this equation should not have a wavelength dependence. ΔνB, if only resulting from material damping, typically is proportional to νa2, which, in turn, is proportional to λo−2 thereby canceling the wavelength dependence in the denominator. This is discussed in the next section. However, there may be chromatic dispersion in the index [50] or photoelastic constant [51,52,53], or it is possible that each acoustic mode possesses a unique gB (more on this later).
Now, a very simple example calculation of the BGS is presented. Figure 2 shows the RIP and longitudinal acoustic velocity profile for a fictitious fiber wherein all acoustic modes have the same ΔνB = 35 MHz and the same gB. How these profiles came to be, with regard to the dopants in Table 1, is not important for this example, although this is briefly revisited in the next section. Following the procedure outlined above, neff is calculated first, establishing the acoustic wavelength and eventually the real part of the acoustic propagation constant. Next, the boundary conditions are applied, from which the imaginary part of the propagation and the acoustic phase velocity are found. The modes then can be plotted to determine the overlap integral given by Equation (8) and the BGS can be constructed using Equation (9). The result is shown in Figure 3. The relative gain coefficient in this case is dominated by the overlap between the acoustic and optical modes. As can be seen by the inset, visually, the L01 acoustic mode clearly has the highest overlap with the LP01 optical mode (optical intensity is shown in red). Higher order acoustic modes (HOAMs) become more oscillatory, and therefore the overlap steadily decreases with increasing mode number, with the LP01–L04 interaction no longer visible above the tails of the other interactions. The acoustic waveguide is clearly multimode, supporting a fundamental and three HOAMs in the L0m mode family.
The optical and acoustic profiles were selected for this example since they give rise to HOAM interactions of reasonable strength. In this case, the LP01–L01 overlap integral (Equation (8)) is about 87%. This “relatively low” value results from the acoustic mode possessing a smaller diameter than the optical mode, providing for enhanced overlap with the HOAMs. In a way fully analogous to the optical mode, bringing the core and cladding acoustic velocity values closer together widens the fundamental acoustic mode and enhances this overlap. Increasing the core acoustic velocity to 5920 m/s increases the overlap integral between the fundamental modes to roughly 93%, while at the same time L03 and L04 become cut off. When the velocity difference decreases to 35 m/s the L02 mode becomes cut off. Focusing now on the core diameter, increasing it may result in an increase in the number of propagating modes. For instance, setting the core diameter to 9 μm (similar to conventional single mode fiber, with all else kept the same) adds the L05 and L06 mode interactions, though the latter is near cutoff. This also results in an LP01–L01 overlap integral of approximately 97%. The L07 becomes guided when the core diameter is increased to 10.8 μm, but the optical V-Number then is only just below cutoff for single mode behavior at 1534 nm.
While a dominant acoustic mode may seem most desirable from the perspective of maximizing the Brillouin gain, there are cases where multiple peaks are instead desirable. The example presented above is for a simple step-index fiber where the acoustic and optical waveguide boundaries coincide. This usually leads to a dominant L01 mode interaction, where fiber optical properties are still well within typical requirements (single mode, low bending loss, etc.). However, given the wide range of materials available in the fabrication of fiber, the RIP and acoustic velocity profiles can be tailored independently, though with some restrictions. With that, it is therefore possible to design a fiber that is multi-layered, both optically and acoustically, and with boundaries that need not coincide, although this can render fabrication extremely, or even prohibitively, difficult. These configurations are discussed in Section 4. However, first, tailoring the fiber profiles necessarily requires doping material into silica, each of which brings about different changes to the parameters that contribute to Equation (10), and results in materials with differing response to the thermo-mechanical environment. This is another important consideration that is addressed in the next section.

3. The Material

The previous section reviewed the acoustic waveguide properties of the optical fiber. In this section, the focus shifts to the material and the influence of dopants on those physical properties of silica glass which are relevant to Brillouin scattering. From the perspective of the waveguide, the acoustic velocity values are most important. The longitudinal and shear velocity values are related to the Lamé constants (λL and μL where the subscript L has been added for disambiguation) as V L = ( λ L + 2 μ L ) / ρ and V S = μ L / ρ , respectively. The numerators within square root are the longitudinal and shear elastic moduli. For the sake of simplicity, the acoustic velocities, rather than the elastic moduli, are considered the key design parameter.
To form the acoustic (or optical) waveguide, some amount of dopant should be added to the base silica glass. For the present analysis, these come in the form of oxide and F additives. To form an acoustic waveguide, a material that reduces the acoustic velocity when added to silica is desired. Optical guidance requires that this dopant also raise the refractive index. Jen et al. [54,55] offered a detailed ultrasonic and optical analysis of doped fiber preforms, giving rise to the empirical design coefficients provided in Table 2. These coefficients suggest a linear dependence of the parameters on the dopant concentration in percentage by weight. This relationship does not necessarily hold for all dopants and parameters. See, for example, the index of binary phosphosilicate glass [56] where linearity in the mole % (mol%) of P2O5 was observed up to 40 mol%. There is not a linear relationship between P2O5 concentration expressed in weight % (wt%) and in mol%. Regardless, these linear values can hold over small, but significant, compositional ranges. Several more such empirical design equations have been provided over the years. For instance, Koyamada et al. [45] summarized data from [57,58,59] giving the following
n = 1.458 ( 1 + 1.0 × 10 3 [ G e O 2 ] w t % 3.3 × 10 3 [ F ] w t % )  
V L = 5944 ( 1 7.2 × 10 3 [ G e O 2 ] w t % 2.7 × 10 2 [ F ] w t % )   ( m / s )
V S = 3749 ( 1 6.4 × 10 3 [ G e O 2 ] w t % 2.7 × 10 2 [ F ] w t % )   ( m / s )
ρ = 2202 ( 1 + 6.4 × 10 3 [ G e O 2 ] w t % 3.4 × 10 3 [ F ] w t % )   ( kg / m 3 )
where the number in brackets is the composition in wt%. These values appear to have been at least partly adopted by others [60,61,62]. What is particularly interesting is that this set of equations now enables the design of ternary glass compositions. Presumably, any number of additional dopants could be appended to these equations. Using them, the composition of the core necessary to achieve the example profiles in Figure 2 is 0.5 wt% F and 4.4 wt% GeO2 in silica (but assuming that pure silica has an acoustic velocity of 5970 m/s [35]).
Rather than utilize simple linear fittings to experimental data, the authors here have been employing a somewhat different approach; one that gives some access to glass design over wider compositional ranges and properties. For the parameters described thus far in this section, a modern form of the Winkelmann–Schott [63] addition model is used to calculate the refractive index (and other properties) of a mixture of glass materials, using volume fraction as the additivity parameter [64]. More specifically, the equation governing the mixture is given by
G = i g i x i  
where g is the bulk parameter of constituent i, x is the additivity parameter (volume fraction in this case), and G is the property of the aggregate glass.
For purposes of discussion, assume a binary glass mixture having constituents A and B, each possessing a bulk material value of g (which are refractive index [65], mass density [66], and the inverse of the acoustic velocity [67]; a simple derivation can be found in [68]). The constituents are assumed to be well-mixed and that the glass structure does not change significantly across a desired compositional range. In other words, the binary system acts as a simple mixture across that compositional range. The volume fraction can be expressed in terms of the mass density, molar mass (M), and the molar concentration [C]mole% of each constituent as
x A = M A ρ A [ C A ] m o l e % M A ρ A [ C A ] m o l e % + M B ρ B [ C B ] m o l e % ,  
with xB = 1 – xA. The resulting calculation gives the property of the binary glass, ideally across the whole compositional range of 100% of constituent A to 100% of constituent B. In the cases where the bulk values are not known, they can become empirical fitting parameters that, once found, can serve as a basis for extrapolation to a more optimized composition. As previously discussed, a summary of material properties obtained through these means can be found in [35]. Above-and-beyond what has been identified in [55], the work in [35] includes Y2O3 [69], MgO [33], SrO [70], BaO [71], Yb2O3 [72], La2O3 [73], Lu2O3 [74], and Li2O [34], providing a broad palette of dopant selection for glass design.
Interestingly, it is possible to deduce both the density and index of the bulk materials, so long as both are assumed for one of the constituents (usually for pure silica as the base material). To illustrate this, Figure 4 provides an example calculation for binary germanosilicate glass utilizing the parameters found in [75] (blue curve). When the mass density is modified for the same bulk refractive index value (these can be read from the endpoints on the graph), the curvatures of the graphs change, offering a means to obtain fittings for it with some degree of confidence. To clarify, Equation (15) does not necessarily give insight into the glass structure. Instead, it is a simple empirical model that can be used in the design of the glass comprising an optical fiber. Most importantly, it provides sufficient degrees-of-freedom to obtain very good fits to experimental data across wide compositional ranges. With caution, this enables simple extrapolations to compositions more suitable for a given application. The methodology has successfully been applied to BaO [71] and Al2O3 [76] silicates, but to the best of the authors’ knowledge has not yet been used in germanosilicate glasses of varying mass density for a fixed composition (or, in other words, a varying bulk GeO2 mass density).
With regard to Figure 4, it is apparent that variations in the fiber processing/fabrication history, those that lead to differences in glass density, will give rise to fibers with different material characteristics. The same can be said of the properties of the individual glass constituents, including the SiO2 component in a multicomponent glass. However, as a simplification, the latter usually is assumed to have fixed properties in the additive model. It was shown [76] experimentally, in a binary aluminosilicate system, that a 25% increase in the density of the Al2O3 component gave rise to a 9% increase in VL and 5% increase in n (in both cases for the Al2O3 component). Regardless of some randomness associated with fabrication, it is not unreasonable to expect that the glass, in fiber form, would have properties not too dissimilar to those in bulk form. This comes with the caveat that fibers are rapidly quenched, whereas in many instances bulk glass samples are annealed, which can lead to some changes to the Brillouin scattering characteristics [77]. This is important to note, as the literature is replete with the elastic characterization of bulk glass (e.g., lithium and sodium silicates, with and without Fe2O3 [78,79], barium alkali silicate glasses [80], strontium manganese borate glasses [81], titanium silicate [82], alkali and alkaline earth metal aluminosilicates [83], and lead and zinc silicate glass [84] just to name a few). Given their very different thermal histories, this argument also can be extended to the case of preform versus drawn fiber. For example, alumina seems to act somewhat differently in going from preform [55] to fiber [76]. It already is well-known that variations in draw tension, temperature, etc. can also lead to frozen-in effects that may influence the refractive index [85] and acoustic velocity [75,86]. Thus, each of the design coefficients and equations provided above should be applied with some caution and care.
The modeling presented thus far allows one, in a straightforward way, to design a desired frequency distribution for the Brillouin scattering interaction. Another common computational approach is the finite element method (FEM). Several groups have used FEM for the design or analysis of the Brillouin scattering spectra in optical fiber [87,88,89,90,91]. One advantage is that these methods may offer greater computational efficiency for more complicated fiber structures, especially with the use of commercial software [91]. A drawback, however, especially with commercial software, is that they generally do not take into consideration those additional parameters that make up Equation (10). This may not be important if a fiber should be lightly doped and be comprised mainly of silica; gB will remain about the same. However, even a few mol % of some additives can have a significant impact on gB (see, for example, the effect of B2O3 on ΔνB [75]). Early on, Niklès et al. [57] observed a significantly broadening spectrum (and therefore decrease in gB) with increasing GeO2 content. Indeed, this is true of all silicate additives listed in [35].
Continuing the discussion more broadly, several simulations, whether of the boundary-value [45] or FEM type, assume that the cladding acts as the predominant waveguide in an acoustically anti-guiding fiber [91]. More specifically, the interacting modes are those defined by the cladding-to-buffer boundary. There is value in scrutinizing this assumption since the phonon lifetime is on the order of 10 ns [49]. Given the speed of sound in pure silica (Equations (12) and (13)), the cladding is roughly two phonon lifetimes wide in a standard 125 μm fiber. It is, therefore, not clear what role the cladding boundary does play in acoustically anti-guiding fiber in the case of small or intermediate cladding diameters. This, likely, is very little in the large fibers encountered in high-power lasers [92] (a 400 μm cladding diameter gives about 6 phonon lifetimes). While acoustically guiding fibers may be preferable in Brillouin-based distributed sensors, hopefully the preceding discussion is still important, as it sheds more light on the contributions to ΔνB. To conclude, it has been shown that, for an acoustic mode occupying regions of the fiber with differing material ΔνB, both FEM and boundary value computational methods can be used to determine a modal value [93,94] spectral width.
Attention now is turned towards the other materials parameters in Equation (10). First, the material acoustic velocity, refractive index, and mass density usually are set by the design of the waveguide. All likely will be within 10% of that of silica, with the refractive index difference probably much less than that for a single mode, weakly guiding, optical fiber. The photoelastic constant, p12, remains and is doubly interesting since: (1) it can take on either positive or negative values [95]; and (2) gB is proportional to the square of its value. It turns out that the common dopants, GeO2 [96], B2O3 [96], and P2O5 [97] all have photoelastic constants that are comparable to that of SiO2, with that of B2O3 apparently slightly higher [96]. However, other dopants that have been applied, such as Al2O3 [52], possess a negative-valued p12. This leads to a reduction in p12 when added to silica, and coupled with any spectral broadening, this can significantly offset gB. It should be noted that p12 does not affect ΔνB.
Therefore, in some fiber designs, perhaps where absolute or relative Brillouin gain is important, consideration of the material in the simulation of the BGS is essential. Complete sets of materials models derived from Equation (15) are provided in the paper sequence in [35,98,99,100] (and are not repeated here). Although the focus was on the suppression of nonlinearities, generally, they also may be applied to the calculation of gB for sensing applications. As can be inferred from Table 1 in [35], however, it will be a challenge to start with pure silica and, then through a materials route, enhance gB. Stated another way, adding just about anything to SiO2 will lower its material gB. This is not meant to discourage investigations into these areas for Brillouin-based distributed sensors, since it is the response of the material to the thermo-mechanical environment that is most important. Fortunately, some interesting cases require displacing only lesser amounts of silica, such that gB is not decreased to a value below system feasibility, should this be a design concern.
To conclude the discussion of gB, an example calculation is presented. Binary P2O5 in SiO2 is the selected material system. This is of interest since P2O5 has a negative thermo-optic coefficient that can give rise to fibers whose νB are immune to changes in temperature [94]. Table 3 provides a summary of the numbers utilized in the calculation. The refractive index values are those at 1534 nm, and the remaining data are from [94,97]. The spectral width is listed at a reference frequency of 11 GHz (arbitrarily selected). This is important since, as the P2O5 content changes, so does ΔνB. This results from the fact that the addition of P2O5 decreases the acoustic velocity, and since the acoustic wavelength is fixed to the optical wavelength via the Bragg condition, the frequency also decreases. Most materials have a spectral width that typically is proportional to the square of the acoustic frequency [101], though this is suggested not to be the case for B2O3 [102] (more on this topic below). Referring to Figure 5, gB initially drops from that of pure SiO2 due to the large, relative acoustic attenuation (large ΔνB) coefficient brought by P2O5. However, as the P2O5 concentration increases, and the acoustic velocity value decreases (decreasing νB), ΔνB ultimately narrows to a point where that effect dominates, raising gB. This results in the absolute minimum in gB([P2O5]) in Figure 5. In the case of materials with negative p12, such as alumina, a singular binary silicate composition where gB = 0 is encountered [103]. What is more, materials that raise the acoustic velocity result in an increasing (not decreasing) spectral width with increasing concentration.
Turning now to the thermo-mechanical response, the Bragg condition may be rewritten in terms of the acoustic velocity as
ν B = 2 n e f f V a λ o  
where the index is the effective index of the optical mode, and Va is the acoustic mode velocity. If the fiber undergoes strain (ε) or a change in temperature (T), the fiber response may be found by differentiating Equation (17), giving rise to
d ν B d ( T , ε ) = 2 λ o ( V a d n e f f d ( T , ε ) + n e f f d V a d ( T , ε ) ) .  
The values for pure silica (bulk material, not waveguide) are summarized in Table 4. The expression for dn/dε depends upon the unstrained index, no. At a wavelength of 1534 nm, the index is 1.444 [50], so this term is 0.262 ε−1. Evaluating the responses at said wavelength using the parameters provided previously and in Table 4 gives dνB/dT = 1.13 MHz/K and dνB/dε = 57.1 GHz/ε (the thermal and strain coefficients, respectively). In the case of pure silica, the term possessing the derivative of Va is more than one order of magnitude larger than the other. Regardless, the advantage of utilizing shorter optical wavelengths is obvious. As a quick note on dn/dT, Prod’homme [104] argued that dn/dT encompasses two competing processes: (a) a decrease in density associated with thermal expansion, resulting in a decreased refractive index; and (b) an increase in polarizability as the electrons become more loosely bound to their nuclei, thus increasing the refractive index. If the latter process dominates, then dn/dT is positive. A list of dn/dT for numerous silica additives can be found in [35], but, in short, F, B2O3, P2O5, and SrO have been shown to bring negative values of dn/dT to the mixture.
These response values are typical of those found in the literature for optical fiber with conventional coatings [105]. Deviation from them depends on the absolute fiber configuration, coating, and glass composition. For instance, it has been shown [106,107] that one can enhance the thermal sensitivity with a coating of high coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE). Going in the other direction, a reversal of the sign of the thermal response was demonstrated by using a high-CTE core cladded in low-CTE silica [34]. As discussed below, these possibilities stem from silica’s anomalous behavior of decreasing acoustic velocity with increasing applied pressure (compression) [108,109,110] (this is the leading reason why νB increases with applied strain).
The glass composition also plays a primary role in the magnitude and sign of the response coefficients. Niklès et al. [57] showed that the addition of GeO2 to silica decreases the magnitude of the thermal coefficient. Interestingly, the addition of Al2O3 [52], SrO [70], BaO [71], La2O3 [73], and Lu2O3 [74] were all found to reduce the magnitudes of both the thermal and strain coefficients. This is interesting from the perspective of designing a fiber whose response to temperature changes or strain is zero.
Niklès et al. [57] also showed that the Brillouin spectral width decreases with increasing temperature in germanosilicate optical fiber. This was attributed to acoustic absorption in the tails of the thermo-absorption curve. Since the acoustic attenuation (damping, or also ΔνB) has a peak at cryogenic temperatures (just over 100 K at 27.5 GHz hypersonic frequency using 633 nm optical illumination, see Figure 6) [111], the Brillouin spectral width must then be decreasing in value moving away from this peak (increasing temperature). Interestingly, being far from the peak also gives rise to the frequency- (or inverse-wavelength-) squared dependence of ΔνB. More specifically, the Brillouin spectral width can be expressed as [112]
Δ ν B = ( 2 n λ o ) 2 η ( ν ) ρ  
where η’(ν) is a dynamic viscosity. Through an analysis utilizing the theory in [112], Law et al. [102] showed that when the temperature is far from the peak of the thermo-absorption curve, η’(ν) becomes independent of frequency. However, in some materials, they suggested, where the fiber fictive temperature is near such a peak, ΔνB acquires a sub-quadratic dependence on frequency, resulting from the frequency dependence of η’(ν). As also is apparent, the relative shape (magnitude and peak temperature) of these thermo-absorption curves must give rise to the relative contribution to ΔνB by dopants [57], as would seem to be confirmed with the case of GeO2 [113]. For completeness, a simulation of ΔνB (after [111,112]) as a function of temperature is shown in Figure 6.
Each of the parameters presented above has some dependence upon the temperature of the optical fiber. From the perspective of the waveguide, as the refractive index or acoustic velocity changes with T, so can guiding characteristics that influence Γm (though likely in an insignificant way). From a material perspective, as the fiber heats, the acoustic velocity changes, thereby resulting in a change in νB. This, in turn, results in a change in ΔνB and therefore gB. The spectral width is also a function of T as discussed in the preceding paragraph. Parker et al. [114] provided an expression for scattered Brillouin power as
P B = A T ν B 2  
where A is an empirical calibration constant associated with the fiber being used in a system. As discussed below, the power dependence on T has been used as an additional tool in discriminating T from ε in a distributed system [115,116].

4. Fiber Configurations

The previous two sections, with references (and the theoretical and empirical findings found therein), provided summaries of the waveguide and material properties that are used in discussing several novel Brillouin-tailored fibers that can be found in the literature. As a sensing tool, one logically can conclude that both the thermo-mechanical response and scattering efficiency of the Brillouin process are of primary interest. For instance, a fiber with enhanced gB may be desirable for short- to moderate-reach sensors with high SNR. However, as discussed above, this may prove to be challenging since fused silica, among oxide compounds, has a relatively high gB due to a narrow ΔνB coupled with a relatively large p12.
In terms of the thermo-mechanical response, a deployed optical fiber will be subject to changes in both T and ε. Obviously, then, if one could somehow devise a configuration whereby a system of two equations with two unknowns (T and ε) can be formulated, then simultaneous strain and temperature sensing could be achieved. For instance, consider the simultaneous use of two independent fibers [117]. Further, consider that each has a unique thermal and strain coefficient. In this case, the system can be characterized by the matrix equation
[ Δ ν B 1 Δ ν B 2 ] = [ C T 1 C ε 1 C T 2 C ε 2 ] [ Δ T Δ ε ]  
where the Cs represent the two thermal and strain coefficients in the obvious way. Equation (21) describes the change in the νB’s with changes in T or ε. Therefore, knowing the Cs a priori, distributed measurements of frequency on the two fibers gives T and ε from some starting, relaxed state (by solving the inverse-matrix problem). As an aside, Equation (21) need not be limited to a 2 × 2 matrix and can include other (even non-Brillouin) parameters, such as Brillouin power (as discussed at the end of the previous section). Other examples include simultaneous use of Brillouin scattering and changes in birefringence in a polarization-maintaining fiber [118,119,120], and the use of Brillouin scattering coupled with thermally-induced changes to the emission spectrum of Er doped into the fiber [121]. The Cs should differ significantly enough to achieve any required system sensitivity. For example, Bao et al. [117] utilized a second fiber that could be kept loose such that no strain was experienced by that fiber. In this case, Cε2 = 0 GHz/ε and Cε1 could remain similar in magnitude to that of silica.
The two fibers (or rather their cores) need not be part of independent structures. For example, Li et al. proposed a dual-core fiber for discriminative sensing [122] and detailed experimental validation was recently provided [123]. In this case, the two cores have non-overlapping values of νB and have differing thermal and strain coefficients. Mizuno et al. [124] described the use of multi- (7-) core fiber for the distributed Brillouin sensing application, but only characterized two of the cores for said application. They found that the thermal and strain coefficients differed by <10% in the first and second cores, but with one parameter being larger and the other being smaller in the first core. They suggested that the change in coefficients largely can be attributed to practical differences in the core materials. Zhao et al. [125,126] showed that the Brillouin scattering response of multi-core fibers is highly sensitive to bending, thus paving the way for three-dimensional shape sensors.
Equation (21) need not be limited to the use of two or more optical fibers/cores. Coefficients 1 and 2 instead may refer to two distinct optical modes in a fiber (if the fiber is multimode) [127]. Should the thermal and strain responses of Brillouin scattering involving two orthogonal optical modes differ, they also may be utilized for discriminative sensing. To remind the reader, the result, or consequence, of the thermo-mechanical response is carried by the scattered optical mode via an interaction with the guided (or possibly anti-guided) acoustic wave. Both the optical and acoustic properties of the fiber may be functions of the environment, though, as discussed above, the latter dominates in fibers comprised mainly of silica. Weng et al. [128] showed that the acousto-optic interactions in such fibers involve optical and acoustic modes that have the most similar shape, and therefore, as would be expected, largest spatial overlap (see Equation (8)). Very nice theoretical analyses of such interactions can be found in [129,130]. Xu et al. [62,131] provided an analysis involving modes possessing orbital angular momentum, while Wu et al. [132] described a hybrid Raman-Brillouin system in a few-mode fiber.
Another possibility for discriminative sensing is the use of multiple acoustic mode interactions (or “peaks” in the BGS) in an optically single mode fiber, as first suggested by Lee et al. [133]. In this case, both the fiber’s acoustic velocity and refractive index profiles are tailored to enhance the gain on one or more HOAMs. Differences in the sensitivity coefficients between the various modes arise from variations in their spatial overlaps with the compositional profile. Figure 7 provides such a BGS (though fictitious) modified utilizing these procedures. The fundamental (L01) and one HOAM (such as L03) now have similar strength, and their responses to a change in T or ε differ. In this case, the HOAM may have greater overlap with a region containing a dopant that lowers CT or Cε, since, as described above, these coefficients can be strong functions of the material. A potential drawback to this approach is that it lowers the gain on the LP01-L01 acousto-optic interaction. However, it has been suggested [134,135] that this could be advantageous in long systems due to the elevated threshold for the onset of the stimulated form of Brillouin scattering (SBS). In Refs. [133,134], Corning LEAF fiber was utilized for discriminative sensing due to the presence of multiple acoustic mode interactions of reasonably similar magnitude.
Along the aforementioned design approach, Zou et al. [136,137] described a fiber with a GeO2-doped core and F-doped inner cladding whereby such differences in material properties led to different thermal and strain coefficients for each guided acoustic mode. They also demonstrated enhancement of the strength of the interaction with the highly oscillatory L03 mode. In a theoretical study, Dragic [138] suggested decoupling the optical and acoustic boundaries to achieve gain equalization between the fundamental mode (L01) and a HOAM. A diagram of such a scheme is provided in Figure 8. Law et al. [94,97] demonstrated a simple means of calculating the thermal and strain coefficients for the interactions with the HOAMs in a radially non-uniform P2O5-doped fiber with matched inner cladding, with excellent agreement between theory and experiment. Note that a revised dn/dT for P2O5 in silica was recently suggested [139]. Additional papers on tailoring the acoustic mode distribution can be found in Refs. [44,61,87,140,141,142]. Finally, Lu et al. [143] used three acoustic modes in LEAF and the relative intensity of two resulting beat signals in the several hundred MHz range for discriminative sensing. To conclude, these fiber configurations are enabled by the relatively wide range of materials and their respective influences on the Brillouin scattering characteristic (see Table 2 or [35]).
As an interesting side note, the aforementioned methods to tailor the BGS require transverse (radial and possibly azimuthal) engineering of the optical and acoustic waveguide properties. However, an optical fiber also may be tailored in the axial direction. Indeed, this has been a known method to suppress SBS in optical fibers: by varying the composition or waveguide properties along the fiber length, the BGS becomes distributed across a wider range of frequencies [144,145,146], thereby decreasing the peak value of gB. Such a fiber enables the possibility of having a unique one-to-one mapping of some position along the length of fiber to a frequency on the BGS. It was suggested [147] that such a fiber can be used for simple distributed sensing in that a modest continuous-wave (CW) measurement of the BGS of the entire fiber can give thermal or strain distributions along the axial direction of that fiber.
Rather than obtaining full discriminative details about the fiber’s environment, perhaps in some cases only a single parameter is wanted, such as a local ε or T alone. It may then be impactful to devise a fiber that is immune to changes in T or ε, respectively. These are referred to as “athermal” and “atensic” (after [71]), respectively. As discussed in the previous section, it appears that the community has yet to observe an increase in CT or Cε simply by adding dopants to silica. In other words, adding just about any oxide to the silica core will reduce the thermal or strain sensitivity. However, on the bright side, this represents a possible path to athermal or atensic fibers.
One drawback to this approach, however, in many of the silicate systems studied (e.g., SrO [70], BaO [71], La2O3 [73], and Lu2O3 [74]), is that an athermal (or atensic) fiber composition usually is accompanied by a significant reduction in its sensitivity to strain (or temperature) and in gB. An exception was observed in [34] with the addition of Li2O to silica, wherein an athermal fiber composition (that also is optically single mode) could be achieved with a strain sensitivity similar to that of pure silica. As discussed in the previous section, this was attributed to a significant increase in the CTE of the core relative to the cladding with the addition of lithia. A possible drawback to this structure was that it was acoustically anti-guiding with a wide ΔνB. It was suggested that this could be avoided with the use of Na2O or K2O. Interestingly, the results in [34] were extrapolated to higher Li2O concentrations [148] and modeling results suggest a maximum (magnitude) thermal response in the range of −6.5 MHz/K, roughly six times higher than silica (but negative), exists in the lithium silicate system; a value comparable to that in polymer fibers [149].
The effect of CTE mismatch between core and cladding also was studied in the aluminosilicate system in [150,151] and the conclusion seems to be that in a fiber where the core CTE (once again, by adding just about anything to silica, etc.) is greater than that of the cladding (assumed to be pure silica), ε also is a function of T. Note that a new model for the CTE using Equation (15) can be found in [152]. However, this dependence may be weak, depending on the absolute composition (which and in what quantity dopants are used). This results from a positive pressure forming on the SiO2 component of the core glass as the temperature is increased. Similarly, and as discussed previously, the fiber could be coated in a material that strains the silica as the temperature is increased and thereby enhancing the thermal sensitivity [106,107].

5. Conclusions

Specialty optical fibers for the Brillouin-scattering-based distributed sensor application were briefly reviewed. While most may not consider Corning’s LEAF non-zero dispersion shifted fiber to be a “specialty fiber”, its use in certain distributed sensor configurations lies well outside the reasons for its development. Therefore, it has been included in this discussion, but with the consideration that acoustic waveguide design could further be optimized and developed for distributed sensors. The optical and acoustic waveguide properties of silicate glass optical fibers first were discussed. Next, material properties were described in the context of how they modify the relevant Brillouin scattering attributes of the fiber. Finally, the literature was surveyed for fiber configurations that give rise to novel methods and arrangements for this distributed sensing application. It has been suggested that these fibers enable systems capable of discriminative sensing (for example, distinguishing changes in ε and T), 3-D shape sensing, simple frequency-domain sensing, systems that are immune to changes in one or more environmental conditions (such as with athermal or atensic fibers), and fibers with enhanced thermo-mechanical response.
Acoustic waveguide design, while leading to novel fiber configurations, such as a multi-peaked BGS with potential for discriminative sensing, has been limited to a few common dopants developed for conventional fabrication methods (such as modified chemical vapor deposition (MCVD)), namely GeO2, Al2O3, and F. This has limited the range of fiber properties that are feasible or even possible. As such, the design of the BGS, the relative strength of gB, and thermal and strain coefficients are limited to a narrow range with the use of these dopants. The use of less conventional materials, even in the silicates, can enrichen the set of tools that can be used in the design of such optical fibers. For instance, the use of less conventional materials such as alkali metal oxide dopants can lead to fibers immune, or even several times more sensitive, to changes in temperature. Such materials also can find value in multi-core fibers and multi-material fibers [153], especially for high-sensitivity discriminative, multivariable sensing.
However, due to technological limitations related to the material in an entrenched fabrication process, such new glass systems have not widely been studied utilizing the more conventional fabrication methods found in the commercial sector [154]. For instance, many of the novel silicate systems studied by these authors were fabricated using the molten core process (more details can be found in [155]) which differs significantly from the MCVD process in terms of both thermal and processing history, and ranges of compositions that can be produced. Although not currently commercially pervasive, it is the contention of these authors that the maturation of this and other fiber and glass fabrication methods [156,157,158] can give access to a wider range of the Periodic Table and fiber embodiments, and more widely-varied thermo-mechanical responses. This can lead to simpler and less expensive sensing systems (such as through beat signal measurements found in [44,143], bringing the measurement frequency to a potentially more cost-effective region in the RF [159]). While fiber development cost may initially be high, the long-term payoff could be economies of scale.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, P.D. and J.B.; Investigation, P.D. and J.B.; Writing-Original Draft Preparation, P.D. and J.B.; Writing-Review & Editing, P.D. and J.B.; Funding Acquisition, P.D. and J.B.

Funding

The Authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Directed Energy Joint Transition Office (DE JTO) through sustained support over many years including contracts: W911NF-05-1-0517, FA9550-07-1-0566, W911NF-12-1-0602, FA9451-15-D-0009/0001 and 0002, and N00014-17-1-2546. Authors also gratefully acknowledge the Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) and contract FA9550-16-1-0383.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Refractive index profile (RIP) for a conventional step-index optical fiber.
Figure 1. Refractive index profile (RIP) for a conventional step-index optical fiber.
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Figure 2. RIP and longitudinal acoustic velocity profile for the fiber of the example.
Figure 2. RIP and longitudinal acoustic velocity profile for the fiber of the example.
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Figure 3. Simulated Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS) calculated (1534 nm) from the profiles in Figure 2. The positions of the longitudinal mode interactions are also shown. The insets plot the LP01 optical mode intensity (red) and the acoustic displacement uz(r) (blue). Vertical dashed lines in the insets delineate the core region.
Figure 3. Simulated Brillouin gain spectrum (BGS) calculated (1534 nm) from the profiles in Figure 2. The positions of the longitudinal mode interactions are also shown. The insets plot the LP01 optical mode intensity (red) and the acoustic displacement uz(r) (blue). Vertical dashed lines in the insets delineate the core region.
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Figure 4. Simulated refractive index of binary germanosilicate as a function of the GeO2 concentration (in mol %) for a base density of 3650 km/m3 (blue curve). The effect of raising or lowering the density in the model affects the curvature of the functions.
Figure 4. Simulated refractive index of binary germanosilicate as a function of the GeO2 concentration (in mol %) for a base density of 3650 km/m3 (blue curve). The effect of raising or lowering the density in the model affects the curvature of the functions.
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Figure 5. gB for the binary phosphosilicate glass as a function of mol % of P2O5 relative to that of pure SiO2 in units of dB. An absolute minimum is observed in the plot. Even a few mol % of P2O5 can cause a significant drop in gB.
Figure 5. gB for the binary phosphosilicate glass as a function of mol % of P2O5 relative to that of pure SiO2 in units of dB. An absolute minimum is observed in the plot. Even a few mol % of P2O5 can cause a significant drop in gB.
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Figure 6. Brillouin spectral width simulation for pure silica at wavelengths of 633 nm and 1534 nm. Far from the peak, the spectral width is proportional to νB2. The spectral width is proportional to the acoustic attenuation coefficient.
Figure 6. Brillouin spectral width simulation for pure silica at wavelengths of 633 nm and 1534 nm. Far from the peak, the spectral width is proportional to νB2. The spectral width is proportional to the acoustic attenuation coefficient.
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Figure 7. Example of a BGS tailored to have two acoustic mode interactions of similar strength. The responses of the modes to changes in T or ε differ. This illustration may represent a typical fiber whose temperature or applied strain has been increased in going from the blue to the red curve.
Figure 7. Example of a BGS tailored to have two acoustic mode interactions of similar strength. The responses of the modes to changes in T or ε differ. This illustration may represent a typical fiber whose temperature or applied strain has been increased in going from the blue to the red curve.
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Figure 8. Example acoustic and refractive index profiles for the equalization of Brillouin gain between the L01 and higher order acoustic modes. In this configuration, the optical and acoustic boundaries are decoupled [138].
Figure 8. Example acoustic and refractive index profiles for the equalization of Brillouin gain between the L01 and higher order acoustic modes. In this configuration, the optical and acoustic boundaries are decoupled [138].
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Table 1. The effect of some common dopants on the optical and acoustic index of silica. RE stands for rare earth. The arrows represent, in the obvious way, an increase or decrease in a material value when added to silica.
Table 1. The effect of some common dopants on the optical and acoustic index of silica. RE stands for rare earth. The arrows represent, in the obvious way, an increase or decrease in a material value when added to silica.
GeO2P2O5TiO2B2O3FAl2O3Y2O3RE2O3
no
na
Table 2. Empirical effect of some common dopants on the optical index and shear and longitudinal acoustic velocities of silica. Data from [55].
Table 2. Empirical effect of some common dopants on the optical index and shear and longitudinal acoustic velocities of silica. Data from [55].
DopantΔn (%/wt%)ΔVS (%/wt%)ΔVL (%/wt%)
GeO2+0.056−0.49−0.47
P2O5+0.020−0.41−0.31
F−0.31−3.1−3.6
TiO2+0.23−0.45−0.59
Al2O3+0.063+0.21+0.42
B2O3−0.033−1.18−1.23
Table 3. Material properties used to calculate gB for the binary phosphosilicate glass.
Table 3. Material properties used to calculate gB for the binary phosphosilicate glass.
nVL (m/s)ρ (kg/m3)p12ΔνB (MHz @ 11 GHz)
SiO21.444597022040.25217.0
P2O51.488393623900.226176.8
Table 4. Material response to changes in T and ε for pure glass SiO2.
Table 4. Material response to changes in T and ε for pure glass SiO2.
ParameterValue
dn/dT (10−6 K−1)+10.42 [94]
dVa/dT (m/s/K)+0.555 [94]
dn/dε (1/ε)−(no3/2) × 0.174 [52]
dVa/dε (m/s/ε)+29,240 [97]

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Dragic, P.; Ballato, J. A Brief Review of Specialty Optical Fibers for Brillouin-Scattering-Based Distributed Sensors. Appl. Sci. 2018, 8, 1996. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/app8101996

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Dragic P, Ballato J. A Brief Review of Specialty Optical Fibers for Brillouin-Scattering-Based Distributed Sensors. Applied Sciences. 2018; 8(10):1996. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/app8101996

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Dragic, Peter, and John Ballato. 2018. "A Brief Review of Specialty Optical Fibers for Brillouin-Scattering-Based Distributed Sensors" Applied Sciences 8, no. 10: 1996. https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.3390/app8101996

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