Temperature measurements are important for thermal-structural experiments in the thermal radiation heating environments such as used for thermal-structural stress analyses. This paper describes the use of multicolor pyrometry for the measurements of diffuse surfaces in thermal radiation environments that eliminates the effects of background radiation reflections and unknown emissivities based on a least-squares algorithm. The near-infrared multicolor pyrometer had a spectral range of 1100-2400 nm, spectrum resolution of 6 nm, maximum sampling frequency of 2 kHz, working distance of 0.6 m to infinity, temperature range of 700-1700 K. The pyrometer wavelength response, nonlinear intensity response, and spectral response were all calibrated. The temperature of a graphite sample irradiated by quartz lamps was then measured during heating and cooling using the least-squares algorithm based on the calibrated irradiation data. The experiments show that higher temperatures and longer wavelengths are more suitable for the thermal measurements in the quartz lamp radiation heating system. This analysis provides a valuable method for temperature measurements of diffuse surfaces in thermal radiation environments.
Heat flux measurements are widely used in thermal environment analyses. The Gardon gauge is an excellent heat flux sensor with a wide measurement range and long lifespan in harsh environments. However, the Gardon gauge is usually calibrated for radiation heat transfer and is not good for convective heat transfer. This paper introduces a method to measure heat flux for convective heat transfer using the Gardon gauge by relating the measurement sensitivity for convection to that for radiation. The heat flux and convective heat-transfer coefficient can then be simultaneously determined by the standard thermo-electromotive voltage output of the Gardon gauge. The method was demonstrated for convective heat-transfer coefficient ranging from 200 to 3000 W/(m 2 K). The analysis illustrates that the measurement sensitivity for convection decreases with increasing convective heat-transfer coefficient. A correction is necessary especially for higher convective heat-transfer coefficient. The corrected convective heat-transfer coefficients and heat fluxes agree well with the actual values. The relative uncertainty in heat flux is within 0.64%. The method not only greatly improves the measurement accuracy of the Gardon gauge for convection applications, but also provides a reference for evaluating convective heat transfer coefficients in convection environments.
Semitransparent zinc sulfide (ZnS) crystal materials are widely used as the infrared-transmitting windows for optical instruments operating in long wavelengths. This paper describes a temperature measurement method for high-temperature ZnS materials using the one-channel optical pyrometer based on a theoretical model of radiation transfer in semitransparent plates. Numerical analyses of the radiation properties of ZnS plate are used to optimize the spectral band for the optical pyrometry. The optimized measurement spectral band is based on a trade-off between the measurement radiation intensity and the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) for the ZnS material. The effective waveband emittance of one-dimensional (1D) ZnS plates is analyzed for various experimental conditions (temperatures, thicknesses, and direction angles) for the one-channel infrared pyrometer with the optimized measurement spectral response. The analysis can be used to improve radiation temperature measurements of semitransparent ZnS materials in applications.
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