The effective knowledge of emissivity is pivotal to obtain reliable temperature measurements through non-contact techniques like pyrometry and thermal imaging. This is fundamental in high-temperature applications since material emissivity strongly depends on temperature conditions. Given the recent attention in high-temperature applications, especially for replacing fossil-fuel-dependent heating with greener solutions in energy-intensive processes, renewed interest in characterizing materials radiant properties rose. This work presents a measurement procedure for characterizing the total emissivity of high-emissivity materials exploiting microwaves for heating the test material. The procedure grounds on a sequential approach, using a reference material of known emissivity (e.g., high-emissivity coating, already characterized sample holder, etc.) to derive the target material total emissivity. Uncertainty analysis is performed to provide a metrological characterization of the approach. The procedure is validated on target materials of known emissivity, focusing on high-emissivity materials commonly employed in microwave heating processes. Results are compatible with reference literature and material datasheets, demonstrating the validity of the proposed approach.
A Measurement Approach for Characterizing Temperature-Related Emissivity Variability in High-Emissivity Materials
Cosoli G.
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2025-01-01
Abstract
The effective knowledge of emissivity is pivotal to obtain reliable temperature measurements through non-contact techniques like pyrometry and thermal imaging. This is fundamental in high-temperature applications since material emissivity strongly depends on temperature conditions. Given the recent attention in high-temperature applications, especially for replacing fossil-fuel-dependent heating with greener solutions in energy-intensive processes, renewed interest in characterizing materials radiant properties rose. This work presents a measurement procedure for characterizing the total emissivity of high-emissivity materials exploiting microwaves for heating the test material. The procedure grounds on a sequential approach, using a reference material of known emissivity (e.g., high-emissivity coating, already characterized sample holder, etc.) to derive the target material total emissivity. Uncertainty analysis is performed to provide a metrological characterization of the approach. The procedure is validated on target materials of known emissivity, focusing on high-emissivity materials commonly employed in microwave heating processes. Results are compatible with reference literature and material datasheets, demonstrating the validity of the proposed approach.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.