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Product category: Materials Testing
News Release from: Calex Electronics | Subject: Infrared temperature sensor
Edited by the Manufacturingtalk Editorial Team on 11 April 2007

Reflected energy compensation IR's
secret weapon

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Calex Electronics has introduced the VL700 infrared temperature sensor, capable of accurate measurement even when the target being measured is at a very different ambient temperature to the sensor.

Measuring a target with a low emissivity value can be difficult at the best of times, but when the target is inside a hot oven and the sensor is mounted outside the oven, it can be virtually impossible without the right equipment The emissivity compensation in standard infrared temperature sensors is not equipped for a situation like this as it assumes that the target being measured is in the same ambient environment as the sensor itself, which can lead to large errors in the measured temperature

The VL700 can provide the solution in this situation with its cutting edge reflected energy compensation feature.

The energy that an infrared temperature sensor measures is composed of three elements; the energy radiated by the target, the energy reflected by the target and energy transmitted through the target.

Most solid targets are opaque at infrared wavelengths and as such the third of these elements can be eliminated.

This leaves the combined radiated and reflected energy from the target as the source of the infrared sensors measurements.

Most infrared sensors measure the ambient temperature where they are positioned, and then assume that any reflections from the target are from a source at the same temperature.

They compare their ambient temperature reading with the infrared energy received from the target, and perform a calculation based on their emissivity setting to give the "real" temperature of the target.

If the ambient temperature where the sensor is positioned is different to that where the target is located then the calculated "real" temperature of the target will be wildly inaccurate, as the reflections coming from the target of its surroundings will not be properly taken into account.

The VL700 does not suffer from this problem as its Reflected Energy Compensation feature allows it to accurately compensate for reflections from the target.

The actual background temperature where the target is situated can be inputted into the VL700 in the same way as the emissivity of the target, and it then uses this value when performing the emissivity correction.

In such situations this allows the VL700 to provide much more accurate measurements of reflective targets than standard infrared temperature sensors.

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