Infrared thermometers are instruments used to swiftly gauge an object’s surface temperature without having to contact it. When the information gathered by these instruments is used to make decisions that have an impact on people, there is a significant difference between industrial and medical IR thermometers. Additionally, you cannot swap Medical and Industrial IR Thermometers.
About IR Thermometers
Temperature can be measured at a distance using IR thermometers. A surface’s emissivity value and infrared radiation are both measured by an infrared thermometer.
The lens on the infrared thermometer concentrates the infrared light and sends it through the thermometer to a thermopile detector. The incoming infrared radiation is then transformed by the thermopile into an electrical signal that is displayed as temperature units. Even though the process seems lengthy, it only takes a few seconds.
The difference between Medical and Industrial IR Thermometers
In order to meet a wide range of industrial applications, industrial/environmental IR thermometers monitor surface temperatures across a wide temperature range. This group of thermometers can measure temperatures from -60 to over 500°C. Due to this wide range, measurement precision must be compromised. The majority of industrial/environmental applications are more than satisfied with the average error factor of industrial/environmental IR thermometers, which ranges from 1 to 1.5°C.
In contrast, Medical IR thermometers must produce results that are much more accurate, and the temperature range needs only to be within the range of a human’spre-determined body temperature. Medical IR thermometers typically measure temperatures in the range of 32°C to 42.5°C and have an accuracy of 0.1°C. An industrial thermometer is the wrong tool because there is only a little temperature difference between well and ill.