Presentation + Paper
22 August 2020 Infrared sensing technologies assisting environmental monitoring
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
A diversified infrared technology base has been developed over the recent decades for various civilian and military sensing needs. The technology has been optimized to balance performance and affordability constraints for a variety of end-use goals. Simplistically, these goals might involve the detection and measurement of nearby, bright sources that fill even the largest angular fields-of-view of pixels in simple, low-magnification systems for which abundant signal makes possible infrared detection and measurement with less-sensitive, uncooled sensor arrays. At another extreme are ultra-cryogenically-cooled systems operating below thermoelectric cooler capabilities and which enable the detection and measurement of much fainter sources that underfill even the tiny angular pixel fields of view set by the diffraction limit of large, high magnification optical systems. Our emphasis is closer to the latter for the applications described here. As one example of the environmental monitoring capabilities made possible in the infrared, gas leak detection in transmission pipelines is vitally important for safe operation and for protecting the environment by accounting for and assessing the impact of leaks that adversely affect climate change. Gas leak detection in the infrared spectrum is facilitated by the distinctive spectral fingerprints of fundamental molecular vibrational modes which can be exploited for the detection of the gas. Sensitivity becomes paramount for many applications requiring faint signal detection, and large sensor array formats facilitate surveillance coverage. Many climate change assessments are expected to involve wide-area coverage of Earth scenes with revisit times sufficiently short to capture important transitory events. Shorter term monitoring of containment compliance requires detecting sufficiently small gas leak flows over broad expanses of the Earth’s surface with high detection sensitivities. In this paper we described supporting technologies in the areas of sensor arrays and optical sub-systems, with an emphasis on dispersive spectrometers. There are a plethora of applications involving the stewardship of a range of biological assets, both in the ocean and on land environments, as well as large-scale sensing of atmospheric properties, including concentrations of greenhouse gases.
Conference Presentation
© (2020) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Paul D. LeVan and Unal Sakoglu "Infrared sensing technologies assisting environmental monitoring", Proc. SPIE 11503, Infrared Sensors, Devices, and Applications X, 115030B (22 August 2020); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2567769
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Infrared radiation

Infrared sensors

Spectrometers

Long wavelength infrared

Remote sensing

Environmental monitoring

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