| Literature DB >> 29966244 |
Mario Méndez Aller1, Ali Mazin Abdul-Munaim2,3, Dennis G Watson4, Sascha Preu5.
Abstract
Gasoline engine oil (SAE 5W-20) was subjected to thermal oxidization (TO) for four periods of time (0 h, 48 h, 96 h and 144 h) and exposed to THz-time domain spectroscopy (TDS) measurement. Error contributions from various error sources, such as repeatability errors, assembly errors of the probe volume and errors caused by the TDS system were evaluated with respect to discernibility and significance of measurement results. The most significant error source was due to modifications of the TDS setup, causing errors in the range of 0.13% of the refractive index for samples with a refractive index around 1.467 and a probe volume length between 5 and 15 mm at 1 THz. The absorption coefficient error was in the range of 8.49% for an absorption around 0.6 cm−1. While the average of measurements taken with different setup configurations did not yield significant differences for different TO times, a single, fixed setup would be able to discern all investigated oil species across the entire frequency range of 0.5⁻2.5 THz. The absorption coefficient measurement showed greater discernibility than the measurement of the refractive index.Entities:
Keywords: Terahertz spectroscopy; engine lubrication oil; error sources; optical path length; thermal oxidation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29966244 PMCID: PMC6069121 DOI: 10.3390/s18072087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Equipment used to thermally oxidize engine oil.
Figure 2Depiction of a THz time-domain spectrometer.
Figure 3(a) Mean refractive index (left axis) and mean absorption coefficient (right axis) of gasoline engine oil (5W20) oxidized over four different times from three measurements of the 15 mm cuvette of gasoline engine oil with 95% confidence interval bars; (b) Relative values for the CI of the refractive index (left axis) and absorption coefficient (right axis).
Figure 4(a) Mean refractive index and absorption coefficient of gasoline engine oil (5W20) oxidized over four different times from three measurements of the 15 mm cuvette; (b) 95% confidence intervals for n and α, taking the CI of the probe volume thickness into account.
Figure 5(a) Refractive index and absorption coefficient with 95% confidence intervals from 5 different measurement setups; (b) 95% confidence interval with N = 5 different setups.
Figure 6Examples of beam propagation errors caused by a sample. Black: beam propagation without sample. Red: deviation of the beam propagation with sample inserted. (a) beam walk off due to a small inclination angle of the sample and (b) focusing error due to imperfect beam collimation or by a very long sample with a thickness longer than the Rayleigh length, dc > zR, causing a shift of the Gaussian beam waist in the measurement path (indicated by f) and a focal shift at the receiver. Both cases not only cause pointing or focusing errors, they also alter the beam profile, leading to reduced transmission form source to receiver. Deflection by the silicon lenses is not shown here.
95% confidence level for the three different cases in relative representation at 1 THz.
| Repeatability Error (Case I) | Total Error Incl. Sample Preparation (Case II) | Inter-System Comparability Error (Case III) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Δn at 1 THz | 0.0048% | 0.04% | 0.13% |
| Δ | 0.22% | 0.56% | 8.49% |