Abstract

An electric current sensor based on Faraday rotation effect in optical fiber was developed for measuring aircraft lightning current. Compared to traditional sensors, the design has many advantages including the ability to measure total current and to conform to structure geometries. The sensor is also small, light weight, non-conducting, safe from interference, and free of hysteresis and saturation. Potential applications include characterization of lightning current waveforms, parameters and paths, and providing environmental data for aircraft certifications. In an optical fiber as the sensing medium, light polarization rotates when exposed to a magnetic field in the direction of light propagation. By forming closed fiber loops around a conductor and applying Ampere s law, measuring the total light rotation yields the enclosed current. A reflective polarimetric scheme is used, where polarization change is measured after the polarized light travels round-trip through the sensing fiber. The sensor system was evaluated measuring rocket-triggered lightning over the 2011 summer. Early results compared very well against a reference current shunt resistor, demonstrating the sensor s accuracy and feasibility in a lightning environment. While later comparisons show gradually increasing amplitude deviations for an undetermined cause, the overall waveforms still compared very well.

Keywords:
Optical fiber Faraday effect Fiber optic sensor Optics Waveform Current sensor Polarization (electrochemistry) Capacitive sensing Electromagnetic interference Faraday cage Materials science Polarization-maintaining optical fiber Optical time-domain reflectometer Acoustics Electrical engineering Current (fluid) Voltage Physics Magnetic field Engineering

Metrics

8
Cited By
1.31
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
13
Refs
0.84
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
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Citation History

Topics

Magneto-Optical Properties and Applications
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Lightning and Electromagnetic Phenomena
Physical Sciences →  Physics and Astronomy →  Astronomy and Astrophysics
Advanced Scientific and Engineering Studies
Social Sciences →  Decision Sciences →  Management Science and Operations Research
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