Open Access
Open access
Sensors, volume 21, issue 13, pages 4299

Digital Filtering Techniques for Performance Improvement of Golay Coded TDM-FBG Sensor

Mohamed M Elgaud 1, 2
Mohd Saiful Dzulkefly Zan 1
Abdulfatah A G Abushagur 1, 3
Abdulwahhab E Hamzah 1
Mohd Hadri Hafiz Mokhtar 1
Norhana Arsad Norhana Arsad 1
Ahmad Ashrif A. Bakar 1
2
 
College of Electrical and Electronic Technology, Benghazi 0021861, Libya
3
 
Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Gharyan University, Gharyan 0021841, Libya
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-06-23
Journal: Sensors
scimago Q1
SJR0.786
CiteScore7.3
Impact factor3.4
ISSN14243210, 14248220
PubMed ID:  34201845
Biochemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics
Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Instrumentation
Abstract

For almost a half-decade, the unique autocorrelation properties of Golay complementary pairs (GCP) have added a significant value to the key performance of conventional time-domain multiplexed fiber Bragg grating sensors (TDM-FBGs). However, the employment of the unipolar form of Golay coded TDM-FBG has suffered from several performance flaws, such as limited improvement of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNIR), noisy backgrounds, and distorted signals. Therefore, we propose and experimentally implement several digital filtering techniques to mitigate such limitations. Moving averages (MA), Savitzky–Golay (SG), and moving median (MM) filters were deployed to process the signals from two low reflectance FBG sensors located after around 16 km of fiber. The first part of the experiment discussed the sole deployment of Golay codes from 4 bits to 256 bits in the TDM-FBG sensor. As a result, the total SNIR of around 8.8 dB was experimentally confirmed for the longest 256-bit code. Furthermore, the individual deployment of MA, MM, and SG filters within the mentioned decoded sequences secured a further significant increase in SNIR of around 4, 3.5, and 3 dB, respectively. Thus, the deployment of the filtering technique alone resulted in at least four times faster measurement time (equivalent to 3 dB SNIR). Overall, the experimental analysis confirmed that MM outperformed the other two techniques in better signal shape, fastest signal transition time, comparable SNIR, and capability to maintain high spatial resolution.

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