Wave Tank Experiment for Sea State Monitoring with Distributed Acoustic Sensing
Yoshiyuki Yajima, Sakiko Mishima, Noriyuki Tonami, Tomoyuki Hino, Shugo Aibe, Junichiro Saikawa, Koji Mizuguchi

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that distributed acoustic sensing on seabed power cables can effectively monitor sea states, including wave period, height, and direction, using a wave tank experiment to validate the approach.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel application of DAS on existing power cables for real-time sea state monitoring validated through controlled wave tank experiments.
Findings
Wave period can be accurately estimated from frequency analysis.
A linear relationship exists between DAS vibration power and wave height.
Wave direction can be estimated with 1.5° error using multiple cable angles.
Abstract
Monitoring sea states across the offshore wind farm areas is essential to keep their structures safe, efficiently operate the systems, and assess the environmental effects of wind turbines. Conventional sea state sensors like buoys limit their observable coverage; therefore, installing many sensors across the wide area is necessary to obtain sufficient sea state information. However, such a situation is not practical in terms of cost. Instead, the study proposes utilising optical fibres, which is embedded in existing power cables for telecommunications on the seabed, as sea state monitoring sensors with distributed acoustic sensing (DAS). DAS is a vibration-sensing technology along optical fibres based on the Rayleigh backscattering of the injected laser. It measures the dynamic strain of the optical fibre in real time at each spatial bin, which is called a "channel" along the fibre. In…
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