In a coherent phase−sensitive optical time−domain reflectometry (Φ−OTDR) sensing system, a frequency shift of hundreds of MHz generated by the pulse modulation of an acoustic optic modulator results in a high central frequency of a beating signal spectrum. In order to reduce the high−performance hardware requirement of signal acquisition, the coherent Φ−OTDR based on envelope extraction is proposed in this paper. Firstly, a theoretical model of a quasi−sinusoidal amplitude− modulated signal is built for the beating signal between local oscillator light and Rayleigh backward scattering light. An envelope detector is then utilized to realize the envelope extraction of beating signals with advantages of a simple structure and quick response. The extracted envelope can be directly used for vibration locating without the conventional orthogonal demodulation. Experiment results present that the sampling rate can be reduced to 10 MHz under the spatial resolution of 10 m and the sensing distance of 31 km. This scheme proves that envelope extraction is a reliable technical route for vibration locating, which can effectively reduce the sampling rate and simplify the data demodulation.
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