Paper
23 March 2001 Infrared thermometry for the real world
Cliff Warren
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Infrared thermometry in the real world is a very demanding method of temperature measurement occurring in a wide variety of applications covering a wide range of industries. Whether measuring target spots, lines or images, end users demand accurate temperature data to the same degree as they would by measuring with traditional contact methods. Designing an accurate non-contact measurement instrument requires paying attention to the entire measurement system from object to the optical system to the detector to the electronics as well as the target environment. Among the many challenges involved is the task of establishing universally accepted traceability standards for low temperature blackbody sources using radiation, rather than contact methods, as transfer devices. Such standards have been recently introduced and, if finally accepted by all National Standards Institutes and used by the IR instrument manufacturers, will go a long way to improve the temperature measurement accuracy of all infrared measurement instruments. For many industrial users, this proof of absolute accuracy is a prerequisite for the acceptance of infrared thermometry as a useful and serious temperature measurement method.
© (2001) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Cliff Warren "Infrared thermometry for the real world", Proc. SPIE 4360, Thermosense XXIII, (23 March 2001); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.421017
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KEYWORDS
Infrared radiation

Calibration

Temperature metrology

Black bodies

Infrared imaging

Thermography

Thermometry

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