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Equipment - Imaging Technology
Imaging Systems
Thermal
imaging instruments measure radiated infrared energy and convert
the data to corresponding maps of temperatures. A true thermal
image is a gray scale image with hot items shown in white and
cold items in black. Temperatures between the two extremes are
shown as gradients of gray. Some thermal imagers have the ability
to add color, which is artificially generated by the camera's
video enhancement electronics, based upon the thermal attributes
seen by the camera. Some instruments provide temperature data
at each image pixel. Cursors can be positioned on each point, and
the corresponding temperature is read out on the screen or display.
Images may be digitized, stored, manipulated, processed and printed
out. Industry-standard image formats, such as the tagged image
file format (TIFF), permit files to work with a wide array of
commercially available software packages.
Images are produced either by scanning a detector (or group of
detectors) or by using with focal plane array. A scanning system
in its simplest form could involve a single element detector
scanning along each line in the frame (serial scanning). In practice,
this would require very high scan speeds, so a series of elements
are commonly scanned as a block, along each line. The use of multiple elements eases the scan speed requirement, but the scan
speed and channel bandwidth requirements are still high. Multiple element scans do, however, result in a high degree of uniformity. The frame movement
can be provided by frame scanning optics (using mirrors) or in
the case of line scan type imagers, by the movement of the imager
itself. Another method is to use a number of elements scanning
in parallel (parallel scanning). These scanners have one element per line
and scan several lines simultaneously. Scan speeds are lower
but this method can give rise to poor image uniformity.
Another
way thermal images are produced is with focal plane arrays (FPA), which are also known as staring arrays. A focal plane array is a group of sensor elements
organized into a rectangular grid. A high magnification image
of a portion of a mirobolometer focal plane array is shown to
the right. The entire scene is focused on the array, each element
cell then provides an output dependent upon the infrared radiation
falling upon it. The spatial resolution of the image is determined
by the number of pixels of the detector array. Common formats
for commercial infrared detectors are 320 by 240 pixels (320 columns,
240 rows), and 640 by 480. The latter format is nearly the resolution
obtained by a standard TV. Spatial resolution, the ability to measure
temperatures on small areas, can be as fine as 15 microns. Temperature
resolution, the ability to measure small temperature differences,
can be as fine as 0.1° C.
The advantage of FPAs is that no moving mechanical parts are
needed and that the detector sensitivity and speed can both be
slower. The drawback is that the detector array is more complicated
to fabricate and manufacturing costs are higher. However, improvements
in semiconductor fabrication practices are driving the cost down
and the general trend is that infrared camera systems will be
based on FPAs, except for special applications. A microbolometer
is the latest type of thermal imaging FPA, and consists of materials
that measure heat by changing resistance at each pixel. The most
common microbolometer material is vanadium oxide (VOX). Amorphous
silicon is another relatively new microbolometer material.
Applications extend from microelectronic levels to scanning wide
areas of the earth from space. Airborne systems can be used to
see through smoke in forest fires. Portable, hand-held units can
be used for equipment monitoring in preventative maintenance and
flaw detection in nondestructive testing programs.
Equipment for Establishing Heat Flow
In some inspection applications, such as corrosion or flaw detection,
the components being inspected may be at ambient temperature and
heat flow must be created. This can be accomplished by a variety
of means. Heating can be accomplished by placing the part in a
warm environment, such as a furnace, or directing heat on the
surface with a heat gun or with flash lamps. Alternately, cooling
can be accomplished by placing the component in a cold environment
or cooling the surface with a spray of cold liquid or gas.
Image Capturing and Analysis
IR cameras alone or used with an external heat source can often
detect large, near-surface flaws. However, repeatable, quantifiable
detection of deeper, subtler features requires the additional
sensitivity of a sophisticated computerized system. In these systems,
a computer is used to capture a number of time sequence images
which can be stepped through or viewed as a movie to evaluate
the thermal changes in an object as a function of time. This technique
is often referred to as thermal wave imaging.
The
image to the right shows a pulsed thermography system. This system
uses a closely controlled burst of thermal energy from a xenon
flash lamp to heat the surface. The dissipation of heat is then
tracked using a high speed thermal imaging camera. The camera
sits on top of the gray box in the foreground. The gray box houses
the xenon flash lamp and it is held against the surface being
inspected. The equipment was designed to inspect the fuselage
skins of aircraft for corrosion damage and can make quantitative measurements
of material loss. It has also been shown to detect areas of water
incursion in composites and areas where bonded structure have separated.
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