Patent · US Expired

Electro-optic voltage sensor with beam splitting

US6492800B1 · kind B1 · utility

25Cited by
4References
43Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateSep 20, 2000
Grant dateDec 10, 2002
Priority date
Expiry dateSep 20, 2020

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC G)Physics
  • CPC primaryG01R1/071
  • WIPO fieldMeasurement
  • WIPO sectorInstruments

Abstract

The invention is a miniature electro-optic voltage sensor system capable of accurate operation at high voltages without use of the dedicated voltage dividing hardware typically found in the prior art. The invention achieves voltage measurement without significant error contributions from neighboring conductors or environmental perturbations. The invention employs a transmitter, a sensor, a detector, and a signal processor. The transmitter produces a beam of electromagnetic radiation which is routed into the sensor. Within the sensor the beam undergoes the Pockels electro-optic effect. The electro-optic effect produces a modulation of the beam's polarization, which is in turn converted to a pair of independent conversely-amplitude-modulated signals, from which the voltage of the E-field is determined by the signal processor. The use of converse AM signals enables the signal processor to better distinguish signal from noise.The sensor converts the beam by splitting the beam in accordance with the axes of the beam's polarization state (an ellipse) into at least two AM signals. These AM signals are fed into a signal processor and processed to determine the voltage between a ground cond…

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.