IEEE Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters | 2021
Sampling Frequency Fluctuations of the Sensors and Software SPIDAR Ground Penetrating Radar: Impact on Probing Passive Surface Acoustic Wave Delay Lines for Pollution Sensing
Abstract
In the context of the subsurface pollutant detection using cooperative targets probed by Ground Penetrating RADAR (GPR), we assess the sampling frequency stability of the instrument as needed to make sure any time delay variation between echoes is associated with sub-surface chemical detection and not with instrument drift. Thanks to surface acoustic wave transducers designed as Ground Penetrating RADAR cooperative targets, the sampling frequency of the Sensors and Software SPIDAR GPR control unit is characterized for short and long term sampling rate stabilities. The long term stability of the instrument is below the phase measurement noise of the surface acoustic wave cooperative target. However, short term (within each trace) phase fluctuations are observed, hinting at short term stroboscopic delay synthesis artifacts. Having demonstrated the stability of the baseline, we demonstrate gas-phase pollutant detection in the sub-surface environment using GPR interrogation of a surface acoustic wave sensor functionalized with a dedicated coating for reacting with hydrogen sulfide. Finally, for on-site long term monitoring, an embedded vector network analyzer is shown to exhibit sufficient stability and the targeted performance for this measurement by recovering the time-domain response through the inverse Fourier transform of the frequency swept characterization of the sensor.