Method for determining a temperature without contact, and infrared measuring system
10816404 ยท 2020-10-27
Assignee
Inventors
- Michael Frank (Bretten, DE)
- Volkmar Senz (Metzingen, DE)
- Michael Badeja (Freiburg, DE)
- Axel Rumberg (Karlsruhe, DE)
- Michael Krueger (Reutlingen, DE)
- Helge Dittmer (Hamburg, DE)
Cpc classification
G01J5/024
PHYSICS
G01J5/023
PHYSICS
International classification
G01J5/06
PHYSICS
Abstract
A method for contactlessly establishing a temperature of a surface includes determining the temperature measurement values of the plurality of blind pixels and determining temperature measurement values of the plurality of measurement pixels. The method further includes determining a temperature measurement value and a temperature measurement values by subtracting the temperature measurement value of the first blind pixel of the plurality of blind pixels from a temperature measurement value of a second blind pixel of the plurality of blind. The method further includes correcting the temperature measurement values by pixel-associated temperature drift components in each case, wherein the temperature drift components are determined using the temperature measurement value and/or the temperature measurement value.
Claims
1. A method for contactlessly establishing a temperature of a surface with an infrared measurement system comprising: an infrared detector array with a detector array substrate; at least one reference pixel, which is connected to the detector array substrate with a first thermal conductivity and which provides a reference signal for establishing temperature measurement values; a plurality of measurement pixels, which are each connected to the detector array substrate with a second thermal conductivity, wherein the measurement pixels are sensitive to infrared radiation and each provide a measurement signal, wherein a temperature measurement value, which is dependent on an intensity of the incident infrared radiation, is established in each case from the difference between the measurement signal and the reference signal; a plurality of blind pixels, which are each connected to the detector array substrate with a third thermal conductivity and which each provide a measurement signal, wherein a temperature measurement value is established in each case from the difference between the measurement signal and the reference signal; the method comprising: determining the temperature measurement values of a plurality of blind pixels; determining the temperature measurement values of a plurality of measurement pixels; the at least one reference pixel and the blind pixels are substantially insensitive to infrared radiation, wherein the first thermal conductivity and the third thermal conductivity are each greater than the second thermal conductivity; temperature measurement values which are independent of the reference signal of the at least one reference pixel are determined by virtue of a temperature measurement value of a first measurement pixel and a temperature measurement value of a first blind pixel being subtracted from one another, wherein the temperature measurement value and the temperature measurement value are established using a reference signal of the same reference pixel; temperature measurement values which are independent of the reference signal of the at least one reference pixel are determined by virtue of a temperature measurement value of a first blind pixel and a temperature measurement value of a second blind pixel being subtracted from one another, wherein the temperature measurement value and the temperature measurement value are established using a reference signal of the same reference pixel; and temperature measurement values are corrected by pixel-associated temperature drift components in each case, wherein the temperature drift components are determined using temperature measurement values.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that wherein a temperature drift behavior m.sub.BP of the blind pixels is determined from the temperature measurement values T.sub.BP of the blind pixels for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components T.sub.drift.
3. The method as claimed in claim 2, wherein the temperature drift behavior of the blind pixels is determined as a constant of proportionality between initial measurement deviations of the blind pixels and temperature measurement values of the blind pixels for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components.
4. The method as claimed in claim 3, wherein the temperature drift behavior of the blind pixels is determined as a constant of proportionality between sensitivities of the initial measurement deviations in relation to the influences of aging of the blind pixels and temperature measurement values of the blind pixels for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components.
5. The method as claimed in claim 2, wherein a mathematical relationship is established between the temperature drift behavior of measurement pixels and a temperature drift behavior of blind pixels for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components and the temperature drift behavior of measurement pixels is determined from the mathematical relationship.
6. The method as claimed in claim 5, wherein the temperature drift behavior of the measurement pixels is set equal to the temperature drift behavior of the blind pixels.
7. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein an incidence of infrared radiation onto the infrared detector array is suppressed at least intermittently by means of a closure mechanism of the infrared measurement system, during which time the temperature measurement values are determined.
8. The method as claimed in claim 7, wherein a temperature drift behavior of the measurement pixels is determined from temperature measurement values for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components.
9. The method as claimed in claim 8, wherein the temperature drift behavior of the measurement pixels is determined as a constant of proportionality between initial measurement deviations of the measurement pixels and temperature measurement values for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components.
10. The method as claimed in claim 8, wherein the temperature drift behavior of the measurement pixels is determined as a constant of proportionality between sensitivities of the initial measurement deviations in relation to the influences of aging of the measurement pixels and temperature measurement values for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components.
11. The method as claimed in claim 5, wherein the temperature drift components are determined from the temperature drift behavior of measurement pixels.
12. The method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the temperature drift components are determined from the temperature drift behavior of the measurement pixels by virtue of the temperature drift components of the respective measurement pixels being calculated in the form of a function as a product of temperature drift behavior and initial measurement deviations of the respective measurement pixels.
13. The method as claimed in claim 11, wherein the temperature drift components are determined from the temperature drift behavior of the measurement pixels by virtue of the temperature drift components of the respective measurement pixels being calculated in the form of a function as a product of the temperature drift behavior and the sensitivities of the initial measurement deviations in relation to the influences of aging of the respective measurement pixels.
14. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the temperature drift components are determined repeatedly at time intervals, in particular regularly, preferably continuously or virtually continuously.
15. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein, in a further method step, an incidence of infrared radiation onto the infrared detector array is suppressed by means of a closure mechanism of the infrared measurement system and the temperature measurement values are each corrected by a pixel-dependent deviation from a mean value of all temperature measurement values measured in the case of a suppressed incidence of infrared radiation.
16. An infrared measurement system for contactlessly establishing a temperature distribution on a surface comprising: an evaluation apparatus; at least one infrared detector array with a detector array substrate at least one reference pixel, which is connected to the detector array substrate with a first thermal conductivity and which provides a reference signal for establishing temperature measurement values; a plurality of measurement pixels, which are each connected to the detector array substrate with a second thermal conductivity, wherein the measurement pixels are sensitive to infrared radiation and each provide a measurement signal, wherein a temperature measurement value is establishable in each case from the difference between the measurement signal and the reference signal; with a plurality of blind pixels, which are each connected to the detector array substrate with a third thermal conductivity and which each provide a measurement signal, wherein a temperature measurement value is establishable in each case from the difference between the measurement signal and the reference signal, wherein the at least one reference pixel and the blind pixels are substantially insensitive to infrared radiation, wherein the first thermal conductivity and the third thermal conductivity are each greater than the second thermal conductivity, wherein the evaluation apparatus is configured to determine the temperature measurement values of a plurality of blind pixels and determine the temperature measurement values of a plurality of measurement pixels, wherein the at least one reference pixel and the blind pixels are substantially insensitive to infrared radiation, wherein the first thermal conductivity and the third thermal conductivity are each greater than the second thermal conductivity, wherein temperature measurement values which are independent of the reference signal of the at least one reference pixel are determined by virtue of a temperature measurement value of a first measurement pixel and a temperature measurement value of a first blind pixel being subtracted from one another, wherein the temperature measurement value and the temperature measurement value are established using a reference signal of the same reference pixel; wherein temperature measurement values which are independent of the reference signal of the at least one reference pixel are determined by virtue of a temperature measurement value of a first blind pixel and a temperature measurement value of a second blind pixel being subtracted from one another, wherein the temperature measurement value and the temperature measurement value are established using a reference signal of the same reference pixel; and wherein temperature measurement values are corrected by pixel-associated temperature drift components in each case, wherein the temperature drift components are determined using temperature measurement values.
17. The infrared measurement system as claimed in claim 16, wherein the measurement pixels and the at least one reference pixel and the blind pixels are realized as p-n diodes.
18. The infrared measurement system as claimed in claim 16, wherein an arrangement of blind pixels on the infrared detector array surrounds, in particular frames, an array of measurement pixels arranged of the infrared detector array.
19. The infrared measurement system as claimed in claim 16, wherein the blind pixels are arranged in an array of measurement pixels arranged on the infrared detector array, in particular arranged in regular fashion, preferably arranged in symmetric fashion, particularly preferably arranged in symmetric fashion in relation to at least one main axis of symmetry of the infrared detector array.
20. The infrared measurement system as claimed in claim 17, wherein the second thermal conductivity is less than the third thermal conductivity by a factor of 10, preferably by a factor of 100, particularly preferably by a factor of 1000 or more.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention is explained in more detail in the subsequent description on the basis of exemplary embodiments that are illustrated in the drawings. The drawing, the description and the claims contain numerous features in combination. Expediently, a person skilled in the art will also consider the features individually and combine these to form meaningful further combinations. The same reference signs in the figures denote the same elements.
(2) In the drawing:
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
(13)
(14)
(15)
(16)
(17)
(18)
(19)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(20) An infrared measurement system 10 according to the invention in the form of a handheld thermal imaging camera 10a is presented below.
(21) An entrance opening 28 in the housing 12 is provided on the side 26 of the housing 12 facing away from the user, thermal radiation emitted by the object 24, in particular emitted in a measurement region 30 (see the dashed solid angle in
(22) Further, a camera 38 operating in the visual spectrum, by means of which a visual image of the measurement region 30 is recorded, is provided on the side 26 of the housing 12 facing away from a user during the use of the thermal imaging camera 10a in one exemplary embodiment of the thermal imaging camera 10a. This visual image can be output together with a thermal image 40 that was generated by a temperature measurement initiated by the user, in particular output in a manner at least partly superposed or overlaid on the thermal image 40. By way of example, the camera 38 can be realized as a CCD image sensor.
(23) On the lower side of the thermal imaging camera 10a, the handle 14 has a receptacle 42 for receiving an energy store 44 which, for example, may be embodied in the form of a rechargeable accumulator or in the form of batteries.
(24) The thermal imaging camera 10a serves to record a thermal image 40 of an object 24 to be examined, as illustrated schematically in
(25)
(26) The infrared detector array 36 of the thermal imaging camera 10a comprises at least one reference pixel 65, a plurality of measurement pixels 62 and a plurality of blind pixels 64 (two in this case). While the at least one reference pixel 65 and the blind pixels 64 represent pixels that are substantially insensitive to infrared radiation, the measurement pixels 62 are provided to capture thermal radiation from the infrared radiation spectrum, which, emanating from the surface 22 of the object 24 to be examined in the measurement region 30, enters the entrance opening 28 of the thermal imaging camera 10a (see
(27) Each measurement pixel 62 is provided to provide an electrical measurement signal U.sub.MP, in particular a potential, at its output, said electrical measurement signal correlating with the radiated-in thermal output of the infrared radiation P.sub.MP on the measurement pixel 62. Each blind pixel 64 is provided to likewise provide measurement signals in the form of an electric potential U.sub.BP at its output, in particular independently of one another. The respective measurement signal U.sub.BP does not correlate (or only has minimal correlation) with the radiated-in thermal output of the infrared radiation.
(28) The at least one reference pixel 65 provides a reference signal U.sub.RP, in particular a reference potential, at its output for the purposes of establishing temperature measurement values. Preferably, the reference signal U.sub.RP does not correlate with the radiated in thermal output of the infrared radiation (see the explanations relating to the thermal connection in conjunction with
(29) For the following consideration, the assumption is made that the infrared detector array 36, in conjunction with the electric circuit and the difference amplifier 138, outputs pixel-dependent voltage differences as measurement signalsin each case a voltage difference U.sub.MPU.sub.RP for measurement pixels 62 and in each case a voltage difference U.sub.BPU.sub.RP for blind pixels 64 (see also
(30) In particular, the control apparatus 48 of the infrared measurement system 10 represents an apparatus which comprises at least one control electronics unit and means for communication with the other components of the thermal imaging camera 10a, in particular means for open-loop and closed-loop control of the thermal imaging camera 10a. The control apparatus 48 is provided to control the thermal imaging camera 10a and to facilitate the operation thereof. To this end, the control apparatus 48 is signal-connected to the other components of the measurement appliance, in particular the infrared detector array 36 (via a circuit), the evaluation apparatus 50, the data communications interface 52, the energy supply apparatus 54, the data memory 56, and also the operating elements 20, 20a and the touch-sensitive display 18. In an alternative exemplary embodiment of the thermal imaging camera 10a, the control apparatus 48 is also connected to a closure mechanism 58 (illustrated using dashed lines here).
(31) In
(32) The evaluation apparatus 50 serves to receive and evaluate measurement signals of the infrared detector array 36, i.e., the voltage differences U.sub.MPU.sub.RP for the measurement pixels 62 and the voltage differences U.sub.BPU.sub.RP for blind pixels 64. The evaluation apparatus 50 has a plurality of functional blocks 60a-60g, which serve to process information, in particular to evaluate the received measurement signals. The evaluation apparatus further comprises a processor, a memory and an operating program with evaluation and calculation routines (each not illustrated in any more detail). The evaluation apparatus 50 is provided to receive and evaluate (functional block 60a) measurement signals provided by the infrared detector array 36, in particular measurement signals provided by measurement pixels 62 (U.sub.MPU.sub.RP) and blind pixels 64 (U.sub.BPU.sub.RP) of the infrared detector array 36. In this way, temperature measurement values T.sub.MP,rel (reference sign 66; see
(33) Further, the evaluation apparatus is provided to determine temperature measurement values T.sub.MP 67, which are independent of the reference signal U.sub.RP of the at least one reference pixel 65, from the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP,rel 66 (see also
(34) The evaluated temperature measurement values, in particular T.sub.MP 67 (see also
(35) Further, the evaluation apparatus 50 is provided to correct temperature measurement values T.sub.MP 66 by a pixel-associated temperature drift component T.sub.drift (reference sign 46; see
(36) In the already mentioned alternative exemplary embodiment in which the thermal imaging camera 10a has a closure mechanism 58 (illustrated using dashed lines in
(37) Overall, the thermal imaging camera 10a, in particular the evaluation apparatus 50 thereof, is provided to carry out an evaluation of a thermal image 40 of the measurement region 30 on the basis of measurement signals from at least a plurality of measurement pixels 62 and blind pixels 64, with the thermal image 40 being corrected in respect of a pixel-associated temperature drift component T.sub.drift 46.
(38) The temperature measurement values T.sub.MP 67 and temperature measurement values T.sub.BP 69 evaluated by the evaluation apparatus 50, the pixel-associated temperature drift components T.sub.drift 46, the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP.sup.corr corrected by the pixel-associated temperature drift components T.sub.drift 46 and thermal images composed from these data, in particular the thermal image 40 to be output, are provided to the control apparatus 48 by the evaluation apparatus 50 for further processing. In this way, there can be an output to a user of the thermal imaging camera 10a using the display 18 of the output apparatus. As an alternative or in addition thereto, the output can be implemented to an external data appliance (not illustrated in any more detail), such as, e.g., a smartphone, a computer or the like, using the data communications interface 52. Here, in the illustrated exemplary embodiment, the data communications interface 52 is embodied as a WLAN and/or Bluetooth interface. Moreover, an output to the data memory 56 for storing the established data and thermal images is conceivable.
(39)
(40) The measurement pixels 62, the blind pixels 64 and the reference pixel 65 are each arranged on the surface 70 of the infrared detector array 36, which simultaneously forms the surface 70 of the detector array substrate 72. As illustrated in the schematic section through a measurement pixel 62 in
(41) However, the measurement pixels 62, the blind pixels 64 and the reference pixel 65 differ in terms of the connection to the detector array substrate 72. While the measurement pixels 62 are connected to the detector array substrate 72 using a few first connection elements 80, the blind pixels 64 are connected to the detector array substrate 72 using many second connection elements 82. The reference pixel 65, too, is connected to the detector array substrate 72 using many third connection elements 83. As shown in the magnified section of a part of
(42) In this exemplary embodiment, the blind pixels 64 and the reference pixel 65 have an identical structure (see
(43) A separate explanation (repetition) of the description for the at least one reference pixel 65 can therefore be largely omitted.
(44) The second effective cross-sectional area A.sub.BP of all second connection elements 82i.e., the sum of the individual cross-sectional areas (reference sign 126) of the second connection elements 82is realized to be ten times the first effective cross-sectional area A.sub.MP of all first connection elements 80i.e., the sum of the cross-sectional areas (reference sign 124) of the first connection elements 80(the same depth of the connection elements 80 and 82 is assumed).
(45) Further, the first effective length L.sub.MP (reference sign 128) of each of the first connection elements 80 is realized to be ten times the second effective length L.sub.BP (reference sign 130) of each of the second connection elements 82. What this realizes is that each measurement pixel 62 is connected to the detector array substrate 72 with a second thermal conductivity .sub.MP 120, while each blind pixel 64 is connected to the detector array substrate 72 with a third thermal conductivity .sub.BP 122. The thermal conductivities of the corresponding connections are in each case denoted by arrows (reference signs 120 and 122) in
=.sub.spec.Math.A/L,
(46) the second thermal conductivity .sub.MP 120 is smaller by at least a factor of 100 than the third thermal conductivity .sub.BP 122 in the illustrated exemplary embodiment.
(47) On account of its mechanical connection via the connection elements 80 to the detector array substrate 72, each measurement pixel 62 is able to dissipate heat introduced by means of infrared radiation. The heat is dissipated to the detector array substrate 72 in the process. As a consequence of radiating-in infrared radiation P.sub.MP, a respective measurement pixel 62 heats by T.sub.MP, wherein an electric resistance of the measurement pixel 62 in relation to a current I.sub.MP flowing through the measurement pixels 62 changes on account of the heating. The second thermal conductivity .sub.MP 120, with which the measurement pixels 62 are connected to the detector array substrate 72, is selected here in such a way that the measurement pixels have a high sensitivity to radiated-in infrared radiation. On the basis of a detected infrared radiation, preferably depending on a detected intensity of radiated-in infrared radiation, each measurement pixel 62 produces an electrical measurement signal U.sub.MP which correlates with the radiated-in thermal output of the infrared radiation P.sub.MP on the measurement pixel 62. The measurement signals of all measurement pixels 62 can be provided independently of one another to the control apparatus 48. Each measurement signal provided by a measurement pixel 62 can be transmitted to the evaluation apparatus 50 of the infrared measurement system 10a for the purposes of establishing the respective temperature measurement value T.sub.MP,rel 66, the latter being evaluated individually by said evaluation apparatus or in combination with other measurement signals of other measurement pixels 62.
(48) Since the blind pixels 64 are connected to the detector array substrate 72 with the third thermal conductivity .sub.BP 122, which is one hundred times greater in this exemplary embodiment than the second thermal conductivity .sub.MP 120, the blind pixels 64in comparison with the measurement pixels 62are substantially insensitive to infrared radiation incident from the measurement region 30. Consequently, the blind pixels 64 can be considered to be blind. A heat flux dissipated from a respective blind pixel 64 to the detector array substrate 72 is therefore significantly larger than a heat flux dissipated from a measurement pixel 62 to the detector array substrate 72 on account of the thermal connection of the blind pixel 64. In a manner analogous to the measurement pixel 62, the voltage U.sub.BPU.sub.RP of each blind pixel 64 can be provided to the control apparatus 48 as a measurement signal and, for the purposes of establishing a temperature measurement value T.sub.BP,rel 68, can be transmitted from said control apparatus to the evaluation apparatus 50 of the infrared measurement system 10a, by means of which it is evaluatedin a manner analogous to the measurement signals of the measurement pixels 62.
(49) The at least one reference pixel 65 is connected to the detector array substrate 72 with a first thermal conductivity .sub.RP 123, which is likewise one hundred times greater in this exemplary embodiment than the second thermal conductivity .sub.MP 120. Consequently, the at least one reference pixel 65in comparison with the measurement pixels 62is likewise substantially insensitive to infrared radiation incident from the measurement region 30. Consequently, the at least one reference pixel 65 can be considered to be blind. A heat flux dissipated from the at least one reference pixel 65 to the detector array substrate 72 is therefore significantly larger than a heat flux dissipated from a measurement pixel 62 to the detector array substrate 72 on account of the thermal connection of the at least one reference pixel 65.
(50)
(51)
(52) In principle, the arrangement of the blind pixels 64 on the detector array substrate 72 is arbitrary but may be advantageously distributed for realizing a temperature drift component T.sub.drift 46 that is uniformly determinable over the entire infrared detector array 36.
(53) On one side of the infrared detector array 36, a single line 142 of reference pixels 65 adjoins blind pixels 64 that frame the array 88 of measurement pixels 62, as shown in
(54) The method according to the invention is described below on the basis of
(55)
(56) Proceeding from the measurement scenario illustrated in
(57) Subsequently, the control apparatus 48 transmits the measurement signals U.sub.MPU.sub.RP and U.sub.BPU.sub.RP, provided by the infrared detector array 36 at the time of initiation, to the evaluation apparatus 50. In method step 202, the evaluation apparatus 50 determines the temperature measurement values T.sub.BP,rel 68 of a plurality of blind pixels 64 from their measurement signals U.sub.BPU.sub.RP. At the same time (or else in succession in one alternative), the evaluation apparatus 50 determines the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP,rel 66 of a plurality of measurement pixels 62 from their measurement signals U.sub.MPU.sub.RP in method step 204.
(58) In method step 206, the evaluation apparatus 50 determines temperature measurement values T.sub.MP 67, which are independent of the reference signal U.sub.RP of the at least one reference pixel 65, from the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP,rel 66. To this end, the evaluation apparatus 50 in each case forms the difference between a temperature measurement value T.sub.MP,rel.sup.1 of a first measurement pixel 62 and a temperature measurement value T.sub.BP,rel.sup.i of a first blind pixel 64 (T.sub.MP=T.sub.MP,rel.sup.1T.sub.BP,rel.sup.1), where the temperature measurement value T.sub.MP,rel.sup.1 and the temperature measurement value T.sub.BP,rel.sup.1 were established using a reference signal U.sub.RP of the same reference pixel 65. Equivalently, the evaluation apparatus determines temperature measurement values T.sub.BP 69, which are independent of the reference signal U.sub.RP of the at least one reference pixel 65, from the temperature measurement values T.sub.BP,rel 68 in method step 208. To this end, the evaluation apparatus in each case forms the difference between a temperature measurement value T.sub.BP,rel.sup.1 of a first blind pixel 64 and a temperature measurement value T.sub.BP,rel.sup.2 of a second blind pixel 64 (T.sub.BP=T.sub.BP,rel.sup.1T.sub.BP,rel.sup.2), where the temperature measurement value T.sub.BP,rel.sup.1 and the temperature measurement value T.sub.BP,rel.sup.2 were established using a reference signal U.sub.RP of the same reference pixel 65. It should be noted that, in an alternative exemplary embodiment of the method, method steps 206 and 202 can also be implemented in a single step, just as method steps 208 and 204 also can be implemented in a single step.
(59) In this exemplary embodiment, these temperature measurement values T.sub.MP are temperature measurement values to be corrected according to the method according to the invention.
(60) The temperature measurement values T.sub.MP,rel, T.sub.BP,rel, T.sub.MP and T.sub.BP are determined from the measurement signals in functional block 60a of the evaluation apparatus 50; see
(61) Subsequently, the evaluation apparatus 50 loads an initial offset map 94, as illustrated in
(62) Subsequently, the evaluation apparatus 50 calculates the temperature drift behavior m.sub.BP 102 of the blind pixels 64 in method step 212 from the temperature measurement values T.sub.BP 69 of the blind pixels 64 as a gradient of a straight line 104, which models the plotted value pairs particularly well; see
T.sub.BP=m.sub.BP.Math.(T.sub.BP,offset.sup.0T.sub.BP,offset),
(63) where T.sub.BP,offset.sup.0 is the abscissa intercept and m.sub.BP 102 is the temperature drift behavior of the blind pixels 64 as a constant of proportionality. The temperature drift behavior m.sub.BP 102 of the blind pixels 64 is determined in functional block 60c of the evaluation apparatus 50; see
(64) In the method step 214, the evaluation apparatus 50 establishes a mathematical relationship between the temperature drift behavior m.sub.MP 100 of measurement pixels and the temperature drift behavior m.sub.BP 102 of the blind pixels 64 for the purposes of determining the temperature drift components T.sub.drift 46. In the exemplary embodiment of the method illustrated in
(65) In method step 216, evaluation apparatus 50 determines the pixel-dependent temperature drift components T.sub.drift 46 from the temperature drift behavior m.sub.MP 100 of the measurement pixels 62. To this end, the evaluation apparatus 50 initially determines the associated initial measurement deviations T.sub.MP,offset 96 for each measurement pixel 62 to be evaluatedin this exemplary embodiment, these are those measurement pixels for which the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP were determined in method step 206from the initial offset map 94 loaded in conjunction with method step 210 (see
T.sub.drift=m.sub.MP.Math.(T.sub.MP,offset.sup.0T.sub.MP,offset).
(66) This is illustrated in
(67) Consequently, the evaluation apparatus 50 determines the temperature drift components T.sub.drift 46 from the temperature measurement values T.sub.BP 69 of the blind pixels 64 in method steps 210 to 216, using the functional blocks 60a to 60e of the evaluation apparatus 50.
(68) In method step 218, there is the final correction of the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP 67 of the measurement pixels 62 by the temperature drift component T.sub.drift 46 determined for the respective measurement pixel 62 by subtracting the two values.
(69) According to the illustration in
(70) In an alternative or additional embodiment of the method, the sensitivity of the initial measurement deviations T.sub.MP,offset in relation to the influences of aging 110 of the measurement pixels 62 and the sensitivity of the initial measurement deviations T.sub.BP,offset in relation to the influences of aging 112 of the blind pixels 64 also can be used in place of the initial measurement deviations T.sub.MP,offset 96 and the initial measurement deviation T.sub.BP,offset 98. In a manner equivalent to the representations in
(71) In an in turn alternative or additional embodiment of the method, the temperature drift components T.sub.drift 46 can be determined using temperature measurement values T.sub.MP.sup.blind 67ainstead of the temperature drift components T.sub.drift 46 being determined from the temperature measurement values T.sub.BP 69 of the blind pixels 64 according to method steps 210 to 216. This is illustrated in the method branch comprising method steps 230 to 234, illustrated using dashed lines, in
(72) To this end, an incidence of infrared radiation on the infrared detector array 36 is suppressed, at least intermittently, by means of a closure mechanism 58 of the infrared measurement system 10, during which time the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP.sup.blind 67a are determined in a manner analogous to method steps 204 and 208 (subsumed here in method step 230).
(73) Subsequently, the evaluation apparatus 50 loads the initial offset map 94, as illustrated in
(74) As already explained, the value pairs (T.sub.MP.sup.blind, T.sub.MP,offset) can be represented by plotting the established temperature measurement values T.sub.MP.sup.blind 67a (analogous to T.sub.BP 69 in
(75) In the already mentioned alternative or additional exemplary embodiment, in which the thermal imaging camera 10a has a closure mechanism 58 (illustrated using dashed lines in
(76) Now, in method step 220, the incidence of infrared radiation on the infrared detector array 36 is initially suppressed by means of the closure mechanism 58 and the temperature measurement values T.sub.MP.sup.blind 67a are read. In
(77) Method steps 220 to 224 are carried out in functional block 60g of the evaluation apparatus 50; see
(78) Subsequently, in method step 226, the corrected and possibly homogenized thermal image 40 is output to the user of the thermal imaging camera 10a using the display 18.
(79)