Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Photonics Res. Centre, Kowloon, China
Abstract :
Fiber Bragg grating (FBG) sensor technology has been attracting substantial academic and industrial interests over the past decade. One transportation system that could be benefitted tremendously from this technology is railways, where it is of the utmost importance to understand the structural and operating conditions of rails as well as that of freight and passenger service cars to ensure safe and reliable operation. FBG sensors offer many important characteristics, such as EMI/RFI immunity, multiplexing capability, and very long-range interrogation, over the conventional electrical sensors for the distinctive operational conditions in railways. FBG sensors are unique from other types of fiber-optic sensors as the measured information is wavelength-encoded, which provides self-referencing and renders their signals less susceptible to intensity fluctuations. In addition, FBGs are reflective sensors that can be interrogated from either end, providing redundancy to FBG sensing networks. These two unique features are particularly important for the railway industry where safe and reliable operations are the major concerns. FBG is the most promising, cost-effective and distributed sensor technology that provides an ideal platform to monitor the condition and structural health of tracks, carriages and underframe equipment in railway systems. In the last few years, a number of field trial railway projects using FBG sensors for axle counting, track and train vibration measurements, monitoring of bogie conditions, structural health monitoring of train bodies, and interaction between overhead contact lines and current collectors (pantograph) were successfully conducted by a few research institutions. These studies demonstrated the superiority of FBG sensors over conventional sensors in many crucial aspects.
Keywords :
Bragg gratings; condition monitoring; distributed sensors; fibre optic sensors; railway engineering; railway rolling stock; FBG sensor; condition monitoring; distributed sensor technology; fiber Bragg grating sensor; fibre-optics sensor networks; railway carriages; railway systems; railway tracks; railway underframe equipment; structural health monitoring; Monitoring; Optical fiber networks; Optical fiber sensors; Photonics; Sensor phenomena and characterization;