Abstract

The aim of this work is to conduct a proof-of-concept study on detection of surface contamination by biological and chemical agents using opto-thermal transient emission radiometry (OTTER). OTTER is an infrared remote sensing technology that has been developed in our research group for skin measurements. It is based on the measurement of laser-induced transient thermal emission spectra in the infrared fingerprint region, and has advantages of non-contact, non-invasive, spectroscopic in nature, and can work on arbitrary surfaces of any materials. In this paper, two types of experiments were conducted, different ingredients on the surface of a sample material and different ingredients on the skin surface. The results show that by measuring the OTTER signal at different detection wavelengths, e.g., 6.05 μm, 6.48 μm, 7.79 μm, 8.5 μm, 9.5 μm, 11.5 μm, 13.1 μm, it is possible to differentiate from skin and skin with different ingredients on the surface. The next step is to develop mathematical models and analytical algorithms to quantify the ingredient concentration on the surface.

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