The present invention relates to a thermal diffusivity measuring device using a periodic heating radiation temperature measuring technique.
In the past, a method and device of periodically heating a part of a sample, measuring a temperature of a portion at a certain distance from a heated position, and obtaining a thermal diffusivity based on a period of a temperature change in order to measure a thermal diffusivity of a material have been known.
Patent Literature 1 discloses a device and a measuring technique using heating of a sample by laser irradiation using an optical fiber with a lens function and temperature measurement by an infrared light detector, and particularly, discloses that heating is performed by circular laser beams having a diameter of about 5 mm for measurement in a thickness direction.
Further, in Patent Literature 2, a periodic heat temperature measuring technique thermophysical property measuring device that can reduce a device price by using an optical fiber with a lens function and be applied to various kinds of samples, and particularly, includes an optical fiber positioning means configured to vertically move the optical fiber from the sample and control a thermal dose per unit area for heating the surface of the sample in order to sufficiently cope with samples of various thicknesses and samples of various thermal diffusivities has been proposed.
Patent Literature 1: JP 2011-185852 A
Patent Literature 2: JP 2009-139163 A
Commonly, in a thickness direction thermal diffusivity measuring device using a radiation thermometer, heating is often performed with a irradiation area in which a laser diameter is 1000 μm or larger. For example, a laser diameter of 5 mm has been proposed in Patent Literature 1. The reason is as follows. When laser beams are irradiated to a sample, heat is two-dimensionally transferred in an in-plane direction as well as a thickness direction. As an irradiation area (laser diameter) is small, heat that is two-dimensionally transferred is considered to be detected in a radiation thermometer, and thus it is considered to be difficult to accurately measure a thermal diffusivity in a thickness direction.
However, in order to obtain sufficient heating performance (capable of detecting) with a laser diameter of 5 mm as in Patent Literature 1, an expensive laser is required, and thus it is difficult to employ it due to a cost problem.
There is another problem. In the thermal diffusivity measuring method using the periodic heating radiation temperature measuring technique, a method of measuring a phase lag while changing a frequency of heating laser light and obtaining a thermal diffusivity based on the phase lag is used. Generally, as a frequency increases, a phase lag decreases and in theory linearly decreases with respect to a square root of an increasing frequency. A portion that decreases linearly can be used for a thermal diffusivity calculation as reliable data, but data before and after an inflection point is regarded as unreliable data and not employed. In the method of the related art, there is a problem in that an inflection point significantly depends on a laser diameter and thus data is unreliable.
There is still another problem. That is, the thermal diffusivity measuring device using the periodic heating radiation temperature measuring technique includes a laser irradiation (output system) connected to a computer and a temperature measuring/data processing system (input system) using a radiation thermometer, and a time lag corresponding to a processing period of time of a network or a computer occurs in the input system and the output system. For this reason, in samples having a short thermal diffusion time, the time lag has strong influence and causes a measurement error. The removal of the measurement error also becomes a problem.
In light of the above problems, the inventors of the present invention have conducted a study on a lens diameter of a radiation thermometer and a laser diameter (an irradiation area).
In other words, in common thickness direction measurement, a large laser irradiation area is used so that heat transferred two-dimensionally is not transferred to a radiation thermometer, but to the contrary, a laser irradiation area is decreased (a laser diameter is decreased).
Further, in common thickness direction measurement, a lens diameter is reduced to be as small as possible according to a laser irradiation area, and a temperature measurement range is set to a irradiation portion, but to the contrary, a lens diameter is increased, and measurement noise is reduced.
Further, the inventors invented a thermal diffusivity calculation method in which a degree of a time lag or the like occurring in a material having a different thermal diffusion time is measured, and a time lag is considered.
According to the present invention, it is possible to reduce noise occurring in a general thermal diffusivity measuring device configuration using a periodic heating radiation temperature measuring technique. Since it is possible to reduce noise, it does not depend on a measurer's measurement skill. In other words, in the past, an effort of reducing noise has been performed by a measurer's skill such as a measurement condition or the number of measurements, and how to evaluate measurement noise has depended on a measurer's subjectivity. However, according to the present invention, it is possible to reduce measurement noise itself. Thus, it is possible to obtain measurement data without depending on a measurer's measurement skill or subjectivity.
Hereinafter, embodiments of the present invention will be described with reference to the appended drawings.
An infrared light condensing optical system 6 is installed at an opposite side to a side at which the heating laser beams are irradiated with the sample 5 interposed therebetween. An infrared fiber 8 is connected to a radiation thermometer 9. For example, the infrared light condensing optical system 6 is configured such that two plane-convex lenses formed of CaF2 are combined while putting the convex sides back to back, and takes a function of condensing infrared rays radiated from a sample surface and inputting infrared rays to a middle infrared optical fiber.
The radiation thermometer 9 detects intensity of infrared light emitted from a region of a diameter of 250 μm of a lower surface of the sample 5. Here, as the infrared light condensing optical system 6, for example, a lens of a finite correction system using a material having excellent permeability for light having a wavelength of 1 μm to 10 μm such as CaF2, Si, Ge, or ZnSe or two paraboloid mirrors coated with gold may be used. As the radiation thermometer, a radiation thermometer having InSb or the like as a detection element may be used. According to the present invention, a sufficient effect can be obtained even through a single element.
The infrared light detected by the radiation thermometer 9 is converted into an electrical signal, and a phase difference θ of a temperature change that oscillates at the frequency f is measured through a lock-in amplifier 10. Here, a value of θ is a phase difference that is bifurcated from the modulation signal used when the function generator 1 modulates the heating laser 2, input to the lock-in amplifier 10, and based on the modulation signal. A PC 11 records the phase difference θ, for example, at intervals of f0.5 (at intervals of 0.5 Hz).
In the present invention, a time lag occurring in the lock-in amplifier 10 is corrected. A correction method is described. After a phase difference is measured through the lock-in amplifier, the PC 11 records the measured phase, the modulation frequency, and a phase difference between the two.
The PC 11 converts the phase difference into a time. The PC 11 includes a setting part for arbitrarily setting a time lag according to characteristics of the lock-in amplifier. After the time lag set through the setting part is corrected, the phase difference is recalculated, and recorded as a new phase difference θ.
For example, the inclination k is obtained by the following method. The PC 11 obtains an inclination by a least-square technique based on 10 preceding and subsequent frequencies and phase differences for each frequency using a square root of a frequency and a phase difference θ as a horizontal axis and a vertical axis, respectively. In other words, an inclination of each frequency can be calculated. This inclination is compared with inclinations corresponding to the preceding and subsequent frequencies measured at intervals of f0.5. As a result of comparison, the smallest portion among portions that fall within an error of 5% is employed as the inclination k.
Such a calculation of k is performed since when it is plotted using a square root of a frequency and a phase difference θ as a horizontal axis and a vertical axis, if the thickness of a sample change, a linear region changes. According to an experiment, if the sample is thin, a range of the linear region changes such that a frequency increases (for example, see an experiment result of 50 μm of
In the device according to the present invention, in light of the foregoing, it is possible to specify a frequency or a phase difference to be selected for calculating the inclination k. In other words, a frequency to be selected can be specified in advance by a thickness correspondence k calculation position storage as
When a thickness direction thermal diffusivity is measured, the surface of the sample 5 is heated by circular irradiation using the lens 4. The infrared light condensing optical system 6 is arranged to measure the temperature of the center of the heated circle with a sample having a thickness d. Thereafter, in each step in which the frequency f is changed, the phase difference θ in which the time lag is considered is measured, and the PC 11 plots and displays the phase difference θ for f0.5. An inclination k calculating means calculates the inclination k, and calculates a thermal diffusivity. At this time, a thickness direction thermal diffusivity a of the sample 5 is represented by the following formula. Here, d indicates a thickness of a sample.
α=πd2/k2 (1)
As described above, the device according to the present invention can measure the thickness direction thermal diffusivity of the sample. In
The samples used in
In
In
In
The PC 11 calculates the inclination k based on a thickness input from a sample thickness input part. In other words, a phase difference corresponding to an input thickness is read based on a frequency stored in the thickness correspondence storage device, and the inclination is calculated as k by performing the least-square technique on 10 points before and after the thickness correspondence frequency.
The present invention can be used to measure thermophysical properties of materials widely used in leading-edge industries.
1 Function generator
2 Heating laser
3 Optical fiber
4 Condensing lens
5 Sample
6 Infrared light condensing optical system
7 Condensing lens
8 Infrared fiber
9 Radiation thermometer
10 Lock-in amplifier
11 PC
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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JP2013-148743 | Jul 2013 | JP | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/JP2014/067805 | 7/3/2014 | WO | 00 |