Abstract

Surface temperature measurements are required by the aerospace and automotive industries to guarantee high-quality products and optimize production processes. Accurate and reliable measurement of surface temperature is very challenging in an industrial environment. Surface contact probes are widely used but poorly characterized, while non-contact infrared thermometry is severely hampered by the unknown emissivity of the surface and by problems caused by stray radiation from the background. An alternative approach to the above techniques is phosphor thermometry, used here in a hybrid contact/non-contact approach.In this work, the development of a lifetime-based phosphor thermometer, its application to industrial surface temperature measurement and its validation are reported in a metrologically sound manner. The phosphor thermometer was initially calibrated by contact on a reference calibrator system at the Istituto Nazionale di Ricerca Metrologica to provide SI traceability to the measurements at the industrial level; the system was later validated by exploiting a metal phase-change method. The robustness of the approach against a strong radiative background was also investigated. A comprehensive uncertainty analysis was carried out, resulting in an expanded uncertainty (k = 2) lower than 1.4 °C over the temperature range from the ambient to 450 °C.The phosphor-based thermometer was then tested at industrial manufacturing premises to measure the surface temperature of aluminium alloy billets during the pre-heating phase before forging. The phosphor-based approach was compared with radiation and contact thermometry in both static and dynamic measurement conditions. The experimental results proved that phosphor thermometry, besides being a valid alternative to conventional techniques, may offer better performance in an industrial setting.

Highlights

  • A wide range of applications in the aerospace and automotive industries rely on accurate surface temperature measurements to ensure high efficiency in the manufacturing process and favourable quality of the final product

  • Surface contact probes are widely used but poorly characterized, while non-contact infrared thermometry is severely hampered by the unknown emissivity of the surface and by problems caused by stray radiation from the background

  • We present the application of the phosphor-based technique in surface temperature measurements at an industrial manufacturing facility

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Summary

Introduction

A wide range of applications in the aerospace and automotive industries rely on accurate surface temperature measurements. An alternative to the approaches outlined above, which may overcome some of the problems encountered with traditional methods, is phosphor thermometry This is a robust hybrid method (i.e. contact/non-contact) to remotely determine the temperature of a surface, independent of surface emissivity and less sensitive to background radiation than IR thermometry. This method has been used in remote measurements of the temperature of both static and moving surfaces even in hostile high-temperature environments, such as in the presence of vibrations, flame, high pressure and electromagnetic interference [3, 4]. The application of the thermometer system to surface temperature measurements of aluminium alloy billets during pre-heating treatment at industrial manufacturing premises is presented, as well as in situ validation by comparison against two conventional techniques, contact thermometry and radiation thermometry

Principle
Experimental setup
Data processing and evaluation
Phosphor calibration
Validation of the phosphor-based technique
Effect of IR background radiation
Industrial application of the phosphor-based thermometer
Measurements in stationary conditions
Measurements in dynamic conditions
Findings
Conclusions

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