Approximation of the emission coefficient for thermography by the combination of geometrical and spectral information -- ThermoHead
Sebastian Fiedler, Roland Clau{\ss}, Hartmut Clau{\ss}, Stefan, Knoblach

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel method combining geometric and spectral data from thermography and 3D scanning to estimate the electrical conductivity of surfaces, improving temperature measurement accuracy.
Contribution
It introduces ThermoHead, a new thermographic system that integrates high-resolution thermal imaging with 3D point cloud data for better material property estimation.
Findings
Successful integration of thermal and geometric data
Improved approximation of emission coefficients
Enhanced accuracy in temperature measurement
Abstract
Thermography allows for the remote measurement of surface temperatures and is widely used for the identification of energy losses, damage detection or quality control. However, thermal imaging is strongly material dependent and therefore measured and real temperatures can differ significantly. The emission coefficient resides between 0 and 1 and changes mainly with the electrical conductivity of the surface. While non-conductive surfaces (stone, wood, glass etc.) have a high emissivity of ca. 0.9, metallic surfaces reside around 0.2. If e.g. an object with a temperature of 100C and E=0.9 gets recorded via thermography, the recording shows a temperature of 90C. The same conditions for a metallic surface on the other hand can result in a measured temperature of only 20C, so room temperature. This article introduces a novel method how to approximate the electrical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermography and Photoacoustic Techniques · Urban Heat Island Mitigation · Building Energy and Comfort Optimization
