Amphenol AAS-930-164B Thermopile ir sensor application Datasheet

Thermopile
IR Sensor
Applications
What is a Thermopile?
Thermopile Features
A thermopile is a serially-interconnected array of
thermocouples, each of which consists of two
dissimilar materials with a large thermoelectric
power and opposite polarities. The thermocouples
are placed across the hot and cold regions of
a structure and the hot junctions are thermally
isolated from the cold junctions. The cold junctions
are typically placed on the silicon substrate to
provide effective heat sink. In the hot regions, there
is a black body for absorbing the infrared, which
raises the temperature according to the intensity
of the incident infrared. These thermopiles employ
two different thermoelectric materials which are
placed on a thin diaphragm having a low thermal
conductance and capacitance.
The thermopile has some unique properties not offered by other detectors:
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• Response to broad infrared spectrum
• No source of bias voltage or current needed
• Inherently stable response to DC radiation
Applications Considerations
Specific Detectivity
Package
The NEP is convenient for predicting the maximum
power a given system can detect, but it has some
undesirable features:
Our thermopile detector is packaged with silicon
filter and thermistor as shown below. We are
supplying TO-5 package and TO-46 package as the
standard type , but on request, other package types
are also available.
• A good thermopile detector will have a small NEP.
• The thermopile detectors of different sizes will
have different NEPs.
So we cannot say, in general, what a good NEP
should be, unless we specify the size of thermopile
detector.
Detectivity has been introduced to include device
noise and sensitivity simultaneously. It is usually
normalized with respect to detector size and noise
bandwidth, and the resulting specific detectivity, D*,
is defined by:
Detector Packaging
A large D* is good, and for a given environment all
good detectors should have almost the same D*.
Noise
The thermopile detector noise is another important
factor determining the detector performance.
There are many noise sources in a thermopile
detector. A fundamental noise is caused by actual
temperature fluctuations.
A theoretical limit of thermopile sensitivity will be
determined when this noise is at its minimum.
In this thermopile detector, Johnson noise of these
many noise sources is a predominant electrical
noise source. Since the device impedance for
a typical thermopile detector is mainly resistive,
the Johnson noise for a detector having a device
resistance R is:
Where B is the noise bandwidth. At low frequency,
flicker noise originating from contacts or other
sources may be dominants, and, depending upon
the sensing materials, shot noise may also be
involved. Typically, Johnson noise is the most important of these electrical noise sources for most
thermopile detectors.
2
(1) Thermistor for the compensation of an environment temperature
According to the variation of an environment temperature, the output of thermopile detector is also
varying. It is therefore need to compensate this
temperature performance of thermopile detector.
Our thermopile detectors are using a thermistor for
the compensation of an environment temperature,
and we have also a variety of thermistors enough for
pursuing customer’s need.
(2) Windows Filter
In order to improve the thermopile detector
performance, it is also a very important factor to
select suitable filter for a given application. We are
basically using a broadband-silicon filter of which
the transmittance is 6-13um.
But when there is an application for an
optical system, the preparation of proper filter
specifications is also of prime importance for the
optimum performance. Therefore we are available
for many typical infrared filters -not only a broad
band pass filters (BBP) but also a narrow band pass
filters (NBP).
The following specifications will assist an engineer
who designs the optical system.
Filters
Typical Applications of IR Detector
It is very important to select a suitable type of
thermopile detector for the desired device and
performance. The following typical applications
will help you when selecting the type of thermopile
sensor.
Energy/Water/Gas
• Monitoring of power station
• Search for fluid leaks
• Control of storage reservoirs
• Detection of occupants in room
Filter
Transmission
Material
Range (um)
Application
Standard
Silicon
6~13um
Appliances:
Microwave oven
Medical:
Ear Thermometer
Automotive:
Tire Temperature
HVAC: Human Body
Detection
F1
Silicon
8~14um
Occupancy detection,
intruder alarms
F2
Sapphire 2~5um
F3
CaF2
1~10um
F4
Silicon
Refer to Filters
chart above
Circuitry
Flame detection,
Analysis equipment
Gas detection
Materials
• Control of chimney stacks, shafts and pipes
• Monitoring of high temperature kilns and furnaces
• Control of casting of fusion metal
Automotive Industry
• Temperature reliability test of electric parts
• Control of heating and thermal isolation of the
passenger compartment
• Control of windscreen deicing
Household Electrical Appliances
• Control of ovens, cooking appliances, heating
elements, electrical iron
• Control of refrigerators, freezers and air
conditioners
Transport/Navigation
• Detection of obstacles
• Driving at night or in difficult conditions (fog, mist,
et al.)
Farming
• Detection of plant and farmland diseases
• Transfer of heat in plants
Medical
• Measurement of surface temperatures of the
human body
• Control of blood flow (varicose veins, obstruction)
• Monitoring of thermotherapy treatments
• Monitoring of physical training
3
Measurement Block Diagrams
Glossary of Terms
Sensitivity
The following are basic terms and symbols used
to define the characteristics of a thermopile IR
detector.
• The heat source is the standard blackbody
furnace to be set at a desired temperature
• There should be no other heat source within
F.O.V. of the detector
• The opening aperture size of the standard
blackbody furnace is always same
• The ambient temperature is always same
Field of View
Bias Voltage [V]
Application of an electrical voltage to make operate
a thermopile detector in a desired way.
• Maximum bias : A bias voltage which yields
maximum signal output
• Optimum bias : A bias voltage which yields
maximum S/N ratio output
Black Body
A source of infrared whose output can be predicted
accurately by Planck`s law.
Cutoff Wavelength [um]
The wavelength at which the specific detectivity (D*)
has decreased to one half of its peak value.
Field of View [FOV, SR]
The solid angles through which the detector can see
given object.
Linearity
How well the output signal tracks the infrared power.
• The heat source is a movable IR point source
• There should be no other heat source within F.O.V.
of the detector
• The ambient temperature is always same
Time Constant Measurement
Noise Equivalent Power [NEP, W]
A minimum signal power the detector can
detectable. This is a function of source temperature,
chopping frequency, noise equivalent bandwidth,
field of view and ambient temperature.
Responsivity [Rv, V/W]
A thermopile detector sensitivity defined as the ratio
of the thermopile detector output signal generated
in response to a unit input radiant power.
Specific Detectivity [D*, cm(Hz)1/2/W]
The detectivity normalized by detector responsive
area and noise bandwidth, so it is a convenient way
to specify and compare detector performance.
Spectral Response
How the responsivity varies with the wavelength of
the infrared power.
• The heat source is a IR point source
• The time constant shall be decided by the time
required 63% of the detector output voltage
• The ambient temperature is always same
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Time Constant [ms]
A term to describe the detector response speed.
This depends on the thermal resistance and the
thermal capacitance of the thermopile IR detector.
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© 2015 Amphenol Corporation. All Rights Reserved. Specifications are subject to change without notice.
AAS-930-164B - 06/2015
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