“…for purging of pipe lines), and (iv) low cost of ownership, since the gas-detection principle is a physical process (not a chemical reaction), and therefore, poisoning of the sensor is not an issue (although dirt/contamination on the optics needs to be considered in the sensor design). For hydrocarbon gases, such as methane, the strongest optical absorption occurs in the mid-IR region, around 3.3 m, but the use of a broadband source in the mid-IR to detect methane [5] has cost and performance limitations. For example, a number of hydrocarbon gases have absorption bands/lines in the same spectral region, so a mid-IR system will often respond to other hydrocarbons, and hence, they are generic hydrocarbon detectors rather than methane-specific.…”