Introduction
Pyroelectric sensors are widely used in flame detectors for industrial safety systems. Unlike motion detection, flame detection relies on sensing the characteristic flicker of flames and their spectral signature.
Flame Characteristics
Flames from hydrocarbon fires have two key properties useful for detection:
- Spectral emission: Strong emission bands from CO2 at 4.3 µm and from water vapor at various wavelengths.
- Flicker frequency: Flames flicker at characteristic frequencies, typically 1-20 Hz, depending on fuel and conditions.
How Pyroelectric Sensors Detect Flames
A flame detector using a pyroelectric sensor typically includes:
- An optical filter that passes only the flame-specific wavelength (e.g., 4.3 µm for CO2)
- A pyroelectric detector that responds to modulated IR (the flame flicker)
- Signal processing that looks for the characteristic flicker frequency
Multi-Spectral Flame Detection
To reduce false alarms from other IR sources (sunlight, heaters, hot machinery), professional flame detectors use multiple sensors with different filters:
- Channel A: Flame wavelength (e.g., 4.3 µm)
- Channel B: Reference wavelength (e.g., 5.0 µm) where flames don’t emit but hot objects do
- Channel C (optional): UV sensor for additional confirmation
Flicker Frequency Analysis
The flame flicker frequency is extracted using analog or digital filtering. A bandpass filter centered on the expected flicker frequency (e.g., 5 Hz) passes the flame signal while rejecting DC and high-frequency noise.
Comparison with Other Flame Detection Technologies
| Technology | Pros | Cons | Pyroelectric IR | UV sensors | IR cameras |
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