Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
653546 | International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer | 2013 | 6 Pages |
A simple and inexpensive radiation heat gauge was developed and tested for high-intensity thermal radiation measurements. The gauge used a thermal image camera to record the temperature variation of a metallic bar painted in black and heated at one end by thermal radiation. The average flux of the irradiation was determined from the rate of temperature change at a selected point on the bar. The aperture of the gauge can be easily varied by changing the diameter of the washer in front of the metallic bar. Numerical solutions were obtained for the transient heat conduction process in the metallic bar, and casted into dimensionless forms which can be conveniently used for bars of different sizes and materials, and/or subjected to different radiation fluxes. The gauge was employed to measure the radiation beams produced by a commercial IR (Infrared) heater and the results were in good agreement with the heater manufacturer's data.