
A fiber-optic voltage sensor developed a decade ago for NASA's aircraft and space power systems has been the building block for a string of new sensor products offering safe, accurate detection and measurement for electrically noisy and hazardous environments.
Srico, Inc. , a Columbus, Ohio-based photonics engineering company, created the original voltage sensor in cooperation with NASA's Glenn Research Center under a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) contract, and successfully marketed it as a solution for fiber-optic communication systems, noncontact probing of high-speed integrated circuits, biomedical engineering and instrumentation, and lightning detection in avionics and mining. The technology has since been propelled to a higher level to address electrodiagnostics, patient monitoring, and functional magnetic resonance imaging (the ability to study the brain's function, not just its structure, like traditional magnetic resonance imaging), as well as physiological monitoring of military pilots and combat personnel.
In developing the follow-on optical sensing products, Srico was also awarded a generous grant from the Garrett Morgan Commercialization Initiative, established by Glenn Research Center to assist small, minority- and women-owned businesses in taking NASA-derived technology to market. This initiative is managed by the Great Lakes Industrial Technology Center (GLITeC).
Our company is very honored and grateful to receive such a prestigious award, says Dr. Sri Sriram, Srico's chief executive officer. This grant is very timely, because the worldwide demand for our optical components is very high, yet the supply is limited.
The basic Photrode system consists of a laser source, optical input and output fibers, an optical chip, an optical receiver, and signal-processing components. When a Photrode sensor picks up a biopotential signal, light from a continuous wave laser source enters the sensor and becomes modulated by the signal. The optical receiver then detects and digitizes the voltage output of the Photrode.
With NASA technology at its core, the Photrode was developed for the U.S. Army Aeromedical Research Laboratory to assess the physiological- and flight-readiness of Army pilots, and for the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research's departments of neuropsychiatry and surgery, for ambulatory alertness-monitoring and triage applications, respectively. Ongoing research and development was extended to the U.S. Army, enabling it to monitor in real time the alertness levels of its personnel and to assess their cognitive performance and sleep/wake status in sustained operational settings. Previously, the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research demonstrated that soldiers who have been awake for 48 to 72 hours rapidly lose their ability to make correct judgments. This lack of sleep has been suggested as a possible cause of friendly fire casualties and loss of expensive equipment. Other studies have supported this notion, further indicating that both sleep (low-frequency EEG) and alertness (high-frequency EEG) measurements are critical in determining a soldier's level of performance and in avoiding incidents that are due to a decline in cognitive function.
With the Photrode, it is now possible to integrate the low-frequency domain of sleep with the high-frequency domain of active brain-functioning into one compact, pocketsize ambulatory system. Photrode introduces the potential to acquire the full range of EEG signals, thereby facilitating the possibility of creating an alertness/drowsiness index for evaluating performance capability in both military and civilian operational settings where awareness is vital.
Srico also markets NASA-influenced wideband integrated optic modulators and fiber-optic microwave links for voltage testing/measurement and signal transmission in industrial fields. These low-drive voltage, high-damage threshold products are well-suited for cable television systems; antenna remoting; automotive and medical electronics testing; aircraft testing; and wireless, satellite, and fiber-optic communications.
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