Thermal infrared reference sources fabricated from low-cost components and materials
Abstract
Mass markets, including mobile phones and automotive sensors, drive rapid developments of imaging technologies
toward high performance, low cost sensors, even for the thermal infrared. Good infrared calibration blackbody sources
have remained relatively costly, however. Here we demonstrate how to make low-cost reference sources, making
quantitative infrared radiometry more accessible to a wider community. Our approach uses ordinary construction
materials combined with low cost microcontrollers, digital temperature sensors and foil heater elements from massmarket
3D printers. Blackbodies are constructed from a foil heater of some chosen size and shape, attached to the back of
a similarly shaped aluminum plate coated with commercial black paint, which normally exhibits high emissivity. The
emissivity can be readily checked by using a thermal imager to view the reflection of a hot object. A digital temperature
sensor is attached to the back of the plate. Thermal isolation of the backside minimizes temperature gradients through the
plate, ensuring correct readings of the front temperature. The isolation also serves to minimize convection gradients and
keeps power consumption low, which is useful for battery powered operation in the field. We demonstrate surface
blackbodies (200×200 mm²) with surface homogeneities as low as 0.1°C at 100°C. Homogeneous heating and low
thermal mass provides for fast settling time and setup/pack-down time. The approach is scalable to larger sizes by tiling,
enabling portable and foldable square-meter-size or larger devices.
Description
Hovland, Harald; Skauli, Torbjørn.
Thermal infrared reference sources fabricated from low-cost components and materials. Proceedings of SPIE, the International Society for Optical Engineering 2018 ;Volum 10625.