Title: Distributed Temperature Sensing using Fiber Optics
1Distributed Temperature Sensing using Fiber Optics
Scott W. Tyler University of Nevada, Reno Dept.
of Geologic Sciences and Engineering tylers_at_unr.ed
u http//wolfweb.unr.edu/homepage/tylers/index.htm
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2What is Distributed Temperature Sensing (DTS)
- The measurement of temperature (and) using only
the properties of a fiber optic cable. - The fiber optic cable serves as the thermometer,
with a laser serving as the illumination source. - Measurements of temperature every 1-2 meters for
as long as 30 km can be resolved, every 1-60
minutes, with temperature resolution of
0.01-0.5oC.
3How Does it Work?
- Rayleigh, Raman and Brillouin scattering all
occur as light is passed through a fiber optic
cable. - Raman scattering is produced by inelastic
collisions of photons with atoms or molecules
within the fiber optic cable. If a photon loses
energy to the fiber, the scattered wavelength is
longer (Stokes Signal) if a scattered photon
gains energy from interactions, its energy is
larger and therefore its wavelength is shorter
(anti-Stokes Signal).
4From Agilent, Inc.
- The Raman wavelengths are predictable and
symmetric. - The anti-Stokes (energy gaining) is strongly
temperature dependant, but the Stokes is
relatively independent of the temperature of the
colliding molecule. - The temperature of the scatterer is calculated
from the ratio of the anti-Stokes/Stokes
Intensity.
5- Currently used in fire monitoring, oil pipeline
monitoring, high tension electrical transmission
cables, down hole monitoring of oil production,
dam seepage. - Cable lengths up to 30 km
- Resolution of Temperature every 1-2 meters!
- Temperature accuracy up to 0.01 oC
6Advantages of DTS
- The cable serves as the measuring device
- Fiber optic cable is relatively inexpensive
(0.50-10/meter) and robust (more on that
later!) and have small thermal inertia. - Once installed, continuous measurements do NOT
disturb the fluid column (wells) or soils. - Very high resolution and long cables can provide
high density coverage of a landscape, lake, or
groundwater reservoir. - Installations can be temporary or permanent.
7Instrument Response and Costs
- Tool costs range from 30K-60K
- Cable 1K-10K/km
- Several manufacturers interested in environmental
applications.
30K Instrument, 2 m resolution
8Traditional Applications
- Geothermal Well Logging
- Circulation in boreholes, fracture mapping,
continuous borehole flowmeters - Limnology and fluid column monitoring
9Sakaguchi and Matsushima (2000) detected
fractures in geothermal wells during Injection,
and showed growth of steam front.
10Circulation in Mine Shafts(Selker, Stekjal,
Zeman, Tyler and Lockington)
- Circulation in flooded Czech mines
- Thermal and salinity stratification
- Double diffusive steps clearly present
- DTS produced a very high resolution data without
disturbance to the fluid column
Steps in both T and S occur over lt1 m
11The Revolutionary or High Spatial Resolution
Applications
- Groundwater inflows to streams and estuaries.
(see Selker et al, WRR and Day-Lewis et al., EOS) - High spatial and temporal resolution snow/ground
interface temperatures, ground freezing and snow
melt. - Very high spatial resolution of lake
stratification and mixing. - Fish habitat monitoring and thermal regime
restoration efficacy.
12Mapping GW Inflows in Streams
- DTS allows continuous measure of stream
temperatures to identify groundwater inflows - Diehl Temp changes allow calculation of gw flux.
From Selker et al., 2006
13Role of Tidal Forcing on Ground Water
- 500 m cable installed in SF Bay to monitor
estuary temps. - Cost 900 for 500 m armored cable
- 500 spatial data points every 5 minutes with no
data loggers!
14Installing fiber optic along the channel
15Measuring Spatial Structure of Snowmelt
- Snow pack temperature experiment currently in
place at Mammoth, CA. - 500 m DTS cable laid to measure ground/snow
interface temperature. - High winds relocated the cable several times
before the snow fell.
16Issues and the Future
- Instrument costs and power requirements are
coming down. - Expensive cables are needed for high pressure
installations. - Surface placement can put the cable at risk from
breakage and rodents, and reuse can be
challenging. - Cables can be repaired AND cable manufacturers
are working with Agilent, Lios and Sensornet for
improved cables for environmental. - The future looks bright. UNR will be campaigning
a tool in April-May 2007.
17Recent Hydrology-Related Publications
- Selker, J. S., L. Thévenaz, H. Huwald, A. Mallet,
W. Luxemburg, N. van de Giesen, M. Stejskal, J.
Zeman, M. Westhoff, M. B. Parlange (2006),
Distributed fiber-optic temperature sensing for
hydrologic systems, Water Resour. Res., 42,
W12202, doi10.1029/2006WR005326. - Selker, J.S., N. van de Geisen, M. Poolman, W.
Luxemburg and M. Parlange, In Press, Fiber Optics
Open Window on Stream Dynamics, Geophysical
Research Letters. - AGU NS24A MCS220 Tuesday 1600h
- NS24A-02 INVITED Monitoring Submarine
Ground-Water Discharge Using a Distributed
Temperature Sensor, Waquoit Bay, Massachusetts
Day-Lewis et al.
18Sensornet DTS Halo Unit, Preliminary