By Thermopile 1397
Uncovering the Mystery of Thermopiles
Building the Bridge for Heat Sensing: Structure and Design
Hot vs. Cold Junction: The Two Sides of Temperature Difference
Performance Engine: Smart Structure Design
Measuring Performance: Main Indicators
Ubiquitous Thermal Sensing: Overview of Application Areas
From Microvolts to Accurate Temperature: Signal Processing and Practical Tips
A thermopile is a series of many tiny thermocouples. It works using the Seebeck effect, which changes a temperature difference (thermal energy) into a voltage signal (electrical energy). Its main job is to detect thermal radiation (infrared rays) or small temperature changes. It is the key sensor for contactless temperature measurement.
A thermopile is not simple. Its smart structure helps it work well:
Structure Part | Main Function |
Thermocouple Array | Creates voltage from temperature difference. Number of pairs decides sensitivity. |
Hot Junction | Absorbs heat. It is the temperature sensing area. |
Cold Junction | Keeps a stable reference temperature. |
Low-Conductivity Base | Blocks heat spread. Keeps heat focused. |
IR Absorption Layer | Captures target infrared radiation. |
Protective Shell | Blocks outside damage. Allows IR light through. |
Thermopiles work because of this physics law:
Hot and Cold Junctions:
Energy Change Chain:
Voltage Boost: The thermopiles add all voltages together:
The thermopile’s performance depends on its materials:
Classic Metal Pairs:
New Semiconductors (used in MEMS):
Mixed Type: Some MEMS designs use both metals and semiconductors.
These two work together but are very different:
Feature | Hot Junction | Hot Junction |
Position | In the center. Faces the heat source. | On the edge. Near the“temperature anchor”(heat sink). |
Purpose | Senses fast temperature changes. | Gives a stable reference temperature. |
Design Tips |
-Has absorption layer - Very small heat capacity - Very strong thermal isolation (floating design) |
- Large heat capacity (linked to heat sink) - Strong heat contact |
Main Goal | Maximize ΔT! | Keep temperature steady! |
Modern thermopiles (especially MEMS ones) improve with great structure:
Floating membranes, vacuum chambers, or micro-bridges increase the heat resistance (R_th) between hot and cold junctions.
Formula: ΔT = P_in × R_th → More resistance gives bigger ΔT, which means more output.
The voltage made for each watt of infrared power.
Formula: R = V_out / P_in
Like the “hearing sense” of the sensor — higher R means better sensitivity.
Example graph: X-axis = IR power (P_in), Y-axis = output voltage (V_out). The steeper the slope, the higher the R.
The smallest power needed to match the sensor’s own noise.
Smaller NEP = higher sensitivity.
Formula: NEP = V_noise / R
Most important total indicator!
It adjusts for the sensor area (A): D = √A / NEP
Higher D* = better performance per area. Useful for comparing different sensor sizes.
Time to reach 63% of the final signal.
It depends on heat capacity (C_th) and heat conductance (G_th).
Formula: τ ≈ C_th / G_th
Industrial sensors need 10ms to several hundred ms.
Affects noise and circuit design.
Shows the safe working limits of the device.
Thermopiles have deeply entered modern life. They offer non-contact, maintenance-free, long life, and controllable cost advantages.
Medical and Healthcare: Forehead thermometers and ear thermometers – quick and touch-free screening to protect public health.
Advantage: Compared to old mercury or electronic thermometers (which are slow and may cause cross-infection), infrared thermopiles give instant and non-contact readings!
Industrial Monitoring: Motor bearings, power equipment, pipelines, and furnace temperatures – prevent overheating and ensure safety.
Advantage: Traditional thermocouples need drilling and touching (which can damage parts and need high maintenance). Thermopiles can monitor from a distance without contact!
Smart Appliances: Detect food temperature in microwaves/ovens, control air conditioner output, and manage rice cooker heating accurately.
Automotive Electronics: Detect people in seats, monitor battery/motor temperatures, and adjust air conditioning for comfort.
Flame Detectors: Sense infrared (IR) radiation from flames.
NDIR Gas Sensors (Non-Dispersive Infrared): Detect CO₂ (greenhouse gas/air quality), refrigerant leaks, and flammable gases like methane.
Advantage: Thermopiles are the best choice for CO₂ detection.
Security Systems: PIR (Passive Infrared) sensors detect people’s motion – for window/door alarms or area monitoring.
Smart Lighting: Lights turn on when people enter and turn off when they leave – saves energy and adds convenience.
Smart Toilets, Dryers, and Soap Dispensers: Auto-start improves hygiene.
Thermopile output signals are very weak and sensitive. We must process them carefully.
Why? Measured temperature (T_target) = function of V_out and T_cold. You cannot find T_target without knowing T_cold!
How? Use a precise temperature sensor (close to cold junction or inside the thermopile) to measure T_cold in real time (e.g., NTC, RTD, or DS18B20). Then use:
T_hot = (V_out / (n × S)) + T_cold ⇒ T_target ≈ T_hot
A thermopile is a thermal sensing device that transforms thermal energy (heat) into electrical energy. Fundamentally, it consists of a group of thermocouples connected in series.
To generate electricity from flame heat, a thermopile employs multiple thermocouples connected in series. This configuration enables temperature monitoring over a wider surface area.
A thermopile transforms heat into electricity, finding widespread use in applications requiring heat or flame detection, such as gas appliances, infrared sensors, and radiometers.