Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.futminna.edu.ng:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/10345
Title: The Design of a Signal Conditioning and Acquisition Elements of a Chopped Broadband Radiation Pyrometer
Authors: Jack, Kufre E.
Etu, Israel A.
Ukanide, Veronica N.
Keywords: Broadband Radiation Pyrometer
Instrument
Temperature Sensor
Chopped
Detector
Issue Date: Oct-2016
Publisher: Proceedings of the World Congress on Engineering and Computer Science 2016 Vol I WCECS 2016, October 19-21, 2016, San Francisco, USA
Citation: Kufre Esenowo Jack, Israel Agwu Etu & Veronica Nicholas Ukanide (2016). The design of a signal conditioning and acquisition elements of a chopped broadband radiation pyrometer that is capable of measuring temperature between 900oC and 1200oC. Proceedings of the World Congress on Engineering and Computer Science organized by International Association of Engineers, held at, University of California, San Francisco USA, October, 2016, Vol.1, pp. 338-344.
Abstract: This paper presents the design of signal conditioning and acquisition elements of a chopped broadband radiation pyrometer. This instrument is capable of measuring temperature between 900oC and 1200oC. This work aims at solving the problem of measuring hot objects with a thermometer. The radiation pyrometer is a non-contact temperature sensor that infers the temperature of an object by detecting its naturally emitted thermal radiation. It collects the visible and infrared energy and focuses it on a detector. The detector used in this device is a thermal sensor. It receives heat energy reflected from a mirror inclined at 45o to the incident signal from the hot object. The design achieved the following: temperature range measured, from 900 to 1200 ; the calibrated instrument is fairly linear with a tolerable nonlinearity of 3.6%, with the sensitivity of . The resolution was quite very small as such it can easily detect the slightest change at its input; the rotating shutter was configured to supply the chopped signal; it operates at a frequency of 50Hz that is lower than the system frequency of 200Hz. The data acquisition system was able to capture data at a periodic time of 0.02 second and below, the system operates within the specified sampling range thus, satisfying Nyquist criteria. The signal so received by the detector is translated to a human readable form and sent to a display.
URI: http://repository.futminna.edu.ng:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/10345
Appears in Collections:Mechatronics Engineering

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