Sensitivity Analysis of Intensity-Modulated Plastic Optical Fiber Sensors for Effective Aging Detection in Rapeseed Transformer Oil

Sensors (Basel). 2023 Dec 13;23(24):9796. doi: 10.3390/s23249796.

Abstract

As the focus tilts toward online detection methodologies for transformer oil aging, bypassing challenges associated with traditional offline methods, such as sample contamination and misinterpretation, fiber optic sensors are gaining traction due to their compact nature, cost-effectiveness, and resilience to electromagnetic disturbances that are typical in high-voltage environments. This study delves into the sensitivity analysis of intensity-modulated plastic optical fiber sensors. The investigation encompasses key determinants such as the influence of optical source wavelengths, noise response dynamics, ramifications of varying sensing lengths, and repeatability assessments. Our findings highlight that elongating sensing length detrimentally affects both linearity response and repeatability, largely attributed to a diminished resistance to noise. Additionally, the choice of the optical source wavelength proved to be a critical variable in assessing sensor sensitivity.

Keywords: degradation; evanescent field; online; refractive index; transformer oil.

Grants and funding

The APC was partly funded by Glasgow Caledonian University, UK Repository Team. The experimental equipment and facilities were provided by the chemistry laboratory of the school of computing, engineering, and built environment, Glasgow Caledonian University, UK.