Using Infrared Thermography for Detecting Defects on Surfaces With Low and Variable Emissivity

Author(s):  
Christopher Dalton ◽  
Brandon Olson ◽  
Feng C. Lai

Currently infrared scanning technology has been successfully applied for the detection of a wide variety of defects in many applications provided that the surfaces have a high emissivity that doesn’t reflect radiation from outside sources. However, surfaces with low and variable emissivity present a challenge for the application of this technology because infrared cameras and sensors cannot differentiate between the emitted radiation from the surface of interest and those reflected from outside sources. The system presented is an attempt to reduce and/or remove the effects of reflected radiation to increase the system’s applicability beyond the limit of high emissivity surfaces. Physical hardware and computer software are used in concert with radiative heat transfer equations to first determine the emissivity of each point on the surface, then use that information obtained to accurately depict the surface temperature. While this newest iteration of the system development has addressed many important issues regarding accuracy, efficiency as well as performance enhancement in the removal of the artifacts of reflected radiation, the technique still has difficulties to be applied to most surfaces with variable emissivity.

2001 ◽  
Vol 11 (05) ◽  
pp. 749-767 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. KLAR ◽  
C. SCHMEISER

Radiative heat transfer equations including heat conduction are considered in the small mean free path limit. Rigorous results on the asymptotic procedure leading to the equilibrium diffusion equation for the temperature are given. Moreover, the nonlinear Milne problem describing the boundary layer is investigated and an existence result is proven. An asymptotic preserving scheme for the radiative transfer equations with the diffusion scaling is developed. The scheme is based on the asymptotic analysis. It works uniformly for all ranges of mean free paths. Numerical results for different physical situations are presented.


2004 ◽  
Vol 127 (3) ◽  
pp. 472-477 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuichiro Tago ◽  
Fumie Akimoto ◽  
Kuniyuki Kitagawa ◽  
Norio Arai ◽  
Stuart W. Churchill ◽  
...  

Radiative heat transfer characteristics from the surface of a substance coated with a high-emissivity material have been examined from the measured two-dimensional (2D) temperature distribution using two-color thermometry principle. The technique utilized a charge coupled device camera and optical filters having either wide or narrow wavelength bandpass filters. The results obtained were compared to evaluate the accuracy of the temperature measurements. The 2D emissivity distributions were also derived from the measured 2D temperature distributions. The results indicate that the substrate coated with high-emissivity material exhibit high emission of radiation, resulting in effective cooling. The enhanced emissivity of materials also results in improved radiative heat transfer in heating furnaces and other high-temperature applications. The emissivity measured with the wide-bandpass filters increased with temperature. Atmospheric absorption, mainly due to humidity, made a negligible contribution to the total spectral intensity and to the temperature measurements. The small discrepancies are attributed to the dependence of emissivity on wavelength. Thus, the use of narrow-bandpass filters in thermometry is advantageous over the wide-bandpass ones.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document