User manual

Appendix
MI 83
12.2TypicalEmissivityValues
Thefollowingtableprovidesabriefreferenceguidefordetermining
emissivity and can be used when one of the above methods is not
practical.Emissivityvaluesshowninthetableareonlyapproximate,
since several parameters may affect the emissivity of a material.
Theseincludethefollowing:
1. Temperature
2. Angle
ofmeasurement
3. Geometry(plane,concave,convex)
4. Thickness
5. Surfacequality(polished,rough,oxidized,sandblasted)
6. Spectralrangeofmeasurement
7. Transmission(e.g.thinfilmsplastics)
To optimize surface temperature measurements, consider the
followingguidelines:
Determinetheobjectemissivityusingthe instrumentwhichis
alsotobeusedfor
themeasurements.
Avoid reflections by shielding the object from surrounding
temperaturesources.
For higher temperature objects use instruments with the
shortestwavelengthpossible.
For translucent materials such as plastic foils or glass, assure
thatthebackgroundisuniformandlowerintemperaturethan
theobject.
Mount instrument perpendicular
to surface if possible. In all
cases,donotexceedanglesmorethan30°fromincidence.