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TI's contact-less temperature sensor opens up possibilities

By | February 16, 2012, 10:46pm PST

Summary: First-ever single-chip passive infrared temperature sensor could be used in tablets, handsets, watches, and cameras for applications yet to be imagined.

Texas Instruments recently brought to market what it claims to be the world’s first single-chip passive infrared (IR) micro-electro-mechanical system (MEMS) temperature sensor, called the TMP006.

Below are TMP006 temperature sensors. Above is a competing thermopile sensor. (Credit: TI)

The TMP006 is a “game changer” that could open up new applications for devices that were previously unable to use IR temperature measurement because of size, power, or costs. That means going past industrial applications to include consumer electronics, such as smartphones, tablets, and notebooks. The invention earned the company an award at CES in Las Vegas last month.

The 1.6 mm x 1.6 mm square dot packs a MEMS thermopile sensor, signal conditioning, 16-bit analogue-to-digital converter (ADC), local temperature sensor, and voltage references all into a package than can be integrated into a silicon manufacturing process. The chip operates from -40 to +125⁰C, with typical accuracy of ±1⁰C for the passive IR sensor and ±0.5⁰C for the local temperature sensor.

Daniel Mar, a product marketing engineer at TI, recently told ZDNet: “We combined the guts that you need in order to take a contact-less temperature measurement and squeeze it into a very low-cost single chip device.”

TI says the device is 95% smaller than competitive devices and uses 90% less power for a fraction of the cost. (The TMP006 is priced at $1.50 for 1,000 units). It gives manufacturers the ability to accurately measure device case temperature using IR technology.

“If you put the chip on a motherboard facing the case, it can pick up the energy coming off the case and provide its true temperature,” said Mar.

It can also be used to measure temperature outside the device, enabling new features and user applications. For instance, the chip could be added to the assortment of sensors found in smartphones–gyroscopes, cameras and GPS chips–to measure the temperature of objects, food, ambient air, etc.

EN-Genius Acquisition Zone said that the device could find a large range of applications for CPU, motor, power management temperature sensing, and gas detectors. “There are also likely to be applications that simply cannot be thought of at this time.”

“One day, you may be able to take your cell phone and put it against your ear and find out if you are running a fever,” said Mar.

Sounds like a solid step towards Star Trek ‘Tricorder’ medical scanners.

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Christopher Jablonski is a freelance technology writer.

Disclosure

Chris Jablonski

Christopher Jablonski has no business relationships, affiliations, investments, or other actual/potential conflicts of interest relating to the content posted so far on this blog.

Biography

Chris Jablonski

Christopher Jablonski is a freelance technology writer. Previously, he held research analyst positions in the IT industry and was the manager of marketing editorial at CBS Interactive. He's been contributing to ZDNet since 2003.

Christopher received a bachelor's degree in business administration from the University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign. With over 12 years in IT, he's an expert on transformational technologies, particularly those influential in B2B.

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re:TI's contact-less temperature sensor opens up possibilities
passmarketing4 Updated - 29th Feb
very interesting news. could be game-changing.
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very interesting news. could be game-changing.

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