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Author
Dinaburg, J. B.
Title
Developing a Display Screen Correlation Metric for Thermal Imaging Cameras.
Coporate
Maryland Univ., College Park
Report
THESIS, 2007, 140 p.
Keywords
cameras | thermal imaging | technology utilization | design applications | radiation transfer | combustion | combustion gases | fire tests | data analysis | radiative heat transfer
Identifiers
thermal imaging camera applications; imager function and technology; existing performance metrics; radiation transfer and combustion atmospheres; surface emission; transmission of IR radiation in combustion gases; imaging optics; fire condition performance testing; spatial frequency contrast resolution in burning atmospheres; bench scale TIC dislplay screen measurements; development of test procedure; full scale fire measurements; bench scale display measurements
Abstract
Thermal imaging cameras detect infrared radiation to semi-quantitatively determine the thermal profile of the surroundings. Previously, no standard performance measurements have been established for thermal imaging cameras in applications such as search and rescue and firefighting. The spatial contrast resolution in realistic atmospheric conditions was assessed for several TIC through full scale fires of methanol, toluene, and common household materials. Absorbing gas-phase combustion products greatly affected the ability of the TIC to measure local contrast in temperatures as a function of spatial frequency. The cost, labor, and repeatability of full scale fire testing make it difficult to include such tests as a standard metric and relatable bench scale options are explored. In this regard, performance metrics have been based on a voltage output signal to determine image quality. A test was developed using a thermal gradient target to relate the output signal to the luminance projected by the LCD screen seen by the user. The target produces a voltage ramp in the output signal which is recorded in 8 bit digital tape format and is compared to the luminance profile measured by a 16 bit CCD camera array with an IR filter. The relationships between the signals were nonlinear and unique to each imager tested. Measurements of the output signal only do not describe the final performance and a complete standard performance evaluation must measure the display luminance. A standardized test for determining the relationship between output and display luminance including gradient target design, luminance measurement system, and optical components has been proposed for the National Fire Protection Association.