Due to the advantages of high sensitivity and electromagnetic interference resistance, the fiber-optic current sensor based on the Faraday effect has received extensive attention and is one of the research focuses in current measurement. However, there is high random linear birefringence inside the sensing coil, which seriously affects the sensitivity of the sensor. The spun fiber is widely used in the field of current sensing to overcome the influence of random linear birefringence on sensitivity. Moreover, the method of adding a Faraday rotator mirror (FRM) to the end of the sensor's induction coil can also be used to analyze the effect of random linear birefringence. An FRM induces light reflection and polarization rotation of 90° so that the outgoing light is orthogonally polarized to the incoming light. Polarization modulation can be eliminated when orthogonally polarized light undergoes reciprocal birefringence. To remove the influence of random linear birefringence on the measurement of fibers' magneto-optical properties, we prepare spun fibers with four helical pitches and unspun fibers and build an FRM-based testing system for magneto-optical properties of fibers.
The optical fiber samples used are homemade low-birefringence spun fibers. During the fiber drawing process, the fiber preforms are rotated at 1000 r·min-1, 667 r·min-1, 500 r·min-1, and 333 r·min-1, and spun fibers with a pitch of 1.0 mm, 1.5 mm, 2.0 mm, and 3.0 mm are obtained, respectively. The wavelength of the light source used in the experiment is 1310 nm. A magneto-optical property testing system based on FRM is built to accurately measure the extinction ratio and Verdet constant of fiber samples. Specifically, the extinction ratio characteristics of spun fibers with different helical pitches and unspun fibers without and with the FRM are measured. Afterward, the Faraday rotation angles and Verdet constants of spun fibers with different helical pitches and unspun fibers without and with the FRM are tested and compared with the theoretical values.
In the case of a light source of 1310 nm and no FRM, the Verdet constant of the spun fiber is larger as its helical pitch decreases. In particular, when the pitch is 1.0 mm, its Verdet constant [0.8304 rad·(T?m)-1] is about 3.43% higher than that of the unspun fiber [0.8029 rad·(T?m)-1]. When an FRM is applied, the measured Verdet constants of different fiber samples are improved to a certain extent, especially for the spun fiber with a pitch of 1.0 mm, whose Verdet constant is improved by 7.50%. In addition, the mean square deviation of the measured Verdet constants of different fibers with FRM is 0.61%, which is less than 0.99% in the case of no FRM. It is indicated that the introduction of FRM can cancel the random linear birefringence in the fiber and improve the measurement stability of the Verdet constant of fibers with different helical pitches. The FRM measurements of the Verdet constant for spun fibers with pitches of 1.0 mm, 1.5 mm, 2.0 mm, and 3.0 mm are improved by 3.94%, 4.72%, 4.24%, and 5.63%, respectively. The addition of FRM can reduce the influence of random linear birefringence on the measurement of the magneto-optical properties of doped fibers and further increase the measurement accuracy of the Verdet constant of doped fibers.