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Development and in situ application of actively heated fiber Bragg grating cable for soil water content measurement

  • Mengya Sun
  • , Jie Liu
  • , Jin Liu
  • , Xing Zheng
  • , Xiaoyan Li
  • , Junyi Guo
  • , Yunqiang Wang
  • , Yongping Tong
  • , Bin Shi
  • Hohai University
  • Nanjing University
  • Chongqing University
  • CAS - Institute of Earth Environment

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

The actively heated fiber-optic (AHFO) technology has emerged as a frontier and hotspot in soil water content measurement, offering advantages such as easy installation, large-scale distributed measurement capability, and resistance to electromagnetic interference. However, current AHFO water content sensors fail to simultaneously achieve high precision, applicability for deep soil, and automated real-time monitoring, thereby limiting their development and application. Therefore, this study introduces a novel actively heated fiber Bragg grating (AH-FBG) cable. Laboratory tests were conducted to assess the heating uniformity of the AH-FBG cable and to establish the temperature characteristic value (Tt) – soil water content (θ) calibration formula for water content measurement. Subsequently, AH-FBG cables were deployed for in situ soil water content monitoring in a test pit on the Loess Plateau. Through two-year monitoring data verified the accuracy of the AH-FBG cable and elucidated the spatiotemporal distribution of in situ loess water content. Laboratory results demonstrated superior heating uniformity of AH-FBG cable, with a Tt standard deviation of approximately 0.3 °C. In the field, the AH-FBG cable exhibited excellent performance in soil water content measurement, achieving a high accuracy of 0.023 cm3/cm3. Further analysis revealed that the θ fluctuation predominantly occurred within a 10 m depth from the soil surface, with an overall upward trend over the two-year monitoring period; the response of shallow θ to precipitation was significant but exhibited increasing hysteresis with depth; frequent precipitation significantly enhanced water infiltration depth. This study provides technical guidance for high-precision, quasi-distributed, automated and real-time water content measurement of deep soil.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4579-4590
Number of pages12
JournalJournal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering
Volume17
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Actively heated fiber Bragg grating (AH-FBG) cable
  • Applicability
  • In situ monitoring
  • Sensing cable
  • Soil water content
  • Spatiotemporal distribution

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