RESUMEN
We demonstrate fast high-precision non-contact distance measurements to technical surfaces using a pair of dual-color electro-optic frequency combs for synthetic-wavelength interferometry (SWI). The dual-color combs are generated from continuous-wave (cw) lasers at 1300 nm and 1550 nm, which are jointly fed to a pair of high-speed dual-drive Mach-Zehnder modulators. The dual-color approach is used for continuous and dead-zone-free compensation of temperature-induced fiber drift. We achieve standard deviations below 2 µm at an acquisition time of 9.1 µs for measurements through 7 m of single-mode fiber. Despite the technical simplicity of our scheme, our concept can well compete with other comb-based distance metrology approaches, and it can maintain its accuracy even under industrial operating conditions. The viability of the concept is demonstrated by attaching the fiber-coupled sensor head to an industrial coordinate measuring machine for acquisition of surface profiles of various technical samples. Exploiting real-time signal processing along with continuous fiber drift compensation, we demonstrate the acquisition of point clouds of up to 5 million data points during continuous movement of the sensor head.
RESUMEN
We demonstrate an optical distance sensor integrated on a silicon photonic chip with a footprint of well below 1 mm2. The integrated system comprises a heterodyne receiver structure with tunable power splitting ratio and on-chip photodetectors. The functionality of the device is demonstrated in a synthetic-wavelength interferometry experiment using frequency combs as optical sources. We obtain accurate and fast distance measurements with an unambiguity range of 3.75 mm, a root-mean-square error of 3.4 µm and acquisition times of 14 µs.