Revisiting wind speed measurements using actively heated fiber optics: a wind tunnel study
2020
Abstract. Near-surface wind speed is typically only measured by point observations. The actively heated fiber-optic (AHFO) technique, however, has the
potential to provide high-resolution distributed observations of wind speeds, allowing for better spatial characterization of fine-scale
processes. Before AHFO can be widely used, its performance needs to be tested in a range of settings. In this work, experimental results on this
novel observational wind-probing technique are presented. We utilized a controlled wind tunnel setup to assess both the accuracy and the precision
of AHFO under a range of operational conditions (wind speed, angles of attack and temperature difference). The technique allows for wind speed
characterization with a spatial resolution of 0.3 m on a 1 s timescale. The flow in the wind tunnel was varied in a controlled
manner such that the mean wind ranged between 1 and 17 m s−1 . The AHFO measurements are compared to sonic anemometer measurements and
show a high coefficient of determination (0.92–0.96) for all individual angles, after correcting the AHFO measurements for the angle of
attack. Both the precision and accuracy of the AHFO measurements were also greater than 95 % for all conditions. We conclude that AHFO has the
potential to measure wind speed, and we present a method to help choose the heating settings of AHFO. AHFO allows for the characterization of
spatially varying fields of mean wind. In the future, the technique could potentially be combined with conventional distributed temperature sensing
(DTS) for sensible heat flux estimation in micrometeorological and hydrological applications.
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