The high-temperature primary standard system was gradually improved at the National Institute of Metrology (NIM) in China after 2004. A new primary standard pyrometer (PSP) was developed, one with a size-of-source effect of 1 × 10 −4 , and regional thermostats for interference filters, photoelectric detectors, and I/V converters. The relative spectral responsivity of the entire PSP was calibrated by means of a new facility. A new LED-based measurement facility and novel systematic error correction model were utilized to characterize the PSP nonlinearity and extend the photocurrent to PSP temperature readings of about 2680 • C. As an improved scheme, the fixed-point blackbody pyrometer assembly was utilized to realize and disseminate the International Temperature Scale of 1990 above the silver point. This scheme can avoid the influences of instability and inhomogeneity of tungsten strip lamps and corrects pyrometer drifts, thereby improving the realization uncertainty and simplifying the transfer chain. The expanded uncertainties of the scale realization ranged from 0.04 • C at the silver point to 0.48 • C at 2474 • C.
The blackbodies of high-temperature fixed points (HTFPs), namely, Co-C, Pt-C, and Re-C eutectic points, were gradually established at the National Institute of Metrology (NIM) of China after 2007, and their characteristics were studied. Recently, the primary standard pyrometer was improved with the lower size-of-source effect, distance effect, and partial temperature controls. The pyrometer was characterized at the new facility for the calibration of the spectral responsivity. The measurement of its nonlinearity extended to a primary standard pyrometer (PSP) reading of approximately 2680 • C for the HTFP measurements. The International Temperature Scale of 1990 above the silver point was realized at the NIM by an improved scheme, the fixedpoint blackbody pyrometer assembly. Two cells each for Co-C, Pt-C, and Re-C points were assigned associated uncertainties (k = 2) of 0.22 • C, 0.37 • C, and 0.75 • C, respectively, in accordance with the NIM scale. These HTFP blackbodies are being adopted for the study and calibration of radiation thermometers at the NIM.
At the National Institute of Metrology of China (NIM), silicon photodiode-based narrow-band interference filter radiometers (FRs) have been designed for the radiometric determination of the thermodynamic temperature. The FR calibrations were performed on a new spectral comparator with a trap detector which was calibrated against the cryogenic radiometer at several discrete laser lines. The new spectral comparator is constructed from two grating monochromators assembled to give lower stray light and higher transmitted flux. Applying a transmittance measurement of the filter in the out-of-band region and careful control of the temperature, the irradiance responsivity of a 633 nm centered FR has been obtained over a dynamic range of nearly eight decades in the wavelength range from 450 nm to 1200 nm. The relative standard uncertainty of the responsivity is also analyzed and estimated to be less than 7 × 10 −4 at the 1 σ level.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.