Author/Authors :
H. C. McEvoy، نويسنده , , D. H. Lowe and M. Owen ، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Over the temperature range from 156 to 962◦C, theNPL maintains a series
of heatpipe blackbody sources for the calibration of customer sources, radiation thermometers,
and thermal imagers. The temperature of each of the sources is determined
using a calibrated platinum resistance thermometer or gold-platinum thermocouple
placed close to the radiating surface at the back of the cavity. The iIntegrity of such a
blackbody source relies on it having good temperature uniformity, a high and wellknown
effective emissivity, and having the sensor in good thermal contact with the
cavity. To verify the performance of the blackbody sources, it is necessary to use an
infrared thermometer that has been independently calibrated to compare the radiance
temperature of the source with the temperature measured by the contact sensor. Such
verification of the NPL blackbodies has been carried out at short wavelengths: from
500 to 1,000◦C using the NPL LP2 calibrated using the NPL gold point, and at 1.6μm
using an InGaAs-based radiation thermometer calibrated at a series of fixed-points
from indium (156◦C) to silver (962◦C). Thermal imaging systems traditionally operate
over the 3–5μm waveband and are calibrated using NPL sources. Up until now,
it has not been possible to verify the performance of the sources in this waveband
except indirectly by cross-comparison of the sources where they overlap in temperature.
A mid-infrared (nominally 3–5μm) radiation thermometer has, therefore, been
designed, constructed, and validated at NPL. The instrument was validated and calibrated
using the fixed-point blackbody sources and then used to validate the heatpipe