Appendices; Emissivity Factors For Common Materials; Ir Energy And Imaging Overview - FLIR TG275 User Manual

Automotive diagnostic thermal camera
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Appendices

11.1 Emissivity Factors for Common Materials

Material
Asphalt
Concrete
Cement
Sand
Soil
Water
Ice
Snow
Glass
Ceramic
Marble
Plaster
Mortar
Brick

11.2 IR Energy and Imaging Overview

A thermal imager generates an image based on temperature differences. In a
thermal image the hottest item in the scene appears as white and the coldest
item as black, and all other items are represented as a gray scale value be-
tween white and black. It may take some time to get used to the thermal im-
agery. Having a basic understanding of the differences between thermal and
daylight cameras can help with getting the best performance from the TG275.
One difference between thermal and daylight cameras has to do with where
the energy comes from to create an image. When viewing an image with an
ordinary camera, there must be some source of visible light (something hot,
such as the sun or lights) that reflects off the objects in the scene to the cam-
era. The same is true with human eyesight; what people see is based on re-
flected light energy. On the other hand, the thermal imager detects energy
that is directly radiated from objects in the scene. Therefore, hot objects such
as parts on an engines and exhaust pipes appear white, while the sky,
#NAS100009; r. AA/57810/57810; en-US
Emissivity
Material
0.90 ~ 0.98
Cloth (black)
0.94
Skin (human)
0.96
Leather
0.90
Charcoal (powder)
0.92 ~ 0.96
Lacquer
0.92 ~ 0.96
Lacquer (matt)
0.96 ~ 0.98
Rubber (black)
0.83
Plastic
0.90 ~ 0.95
Timber
0.90 ~ 0.94
Paper
0.94
Chromium Oxides
0.80 ~ 0.90
Copper Oxides
0.89 ~ 0.91
Iron Oxides
0.93 ~ 0.96
Textiles
Emissivity
0.98
0.98
0.75 ~ 0.80
0.96
0.80 ~ 0.95
0.97
0.94
0.85 ~ 0.95
0.90
0.70 ~ 0.94
0.81
0.78
0.78 to 0.82
0.90
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