LC160 Uncooled 120x90 / 17μm Thermal Camera Core for Human Body Temperature Measurement
Specially designed for body temperature measurement, the LC160 infrared module has an temperature range from 20℃~50℃ and an accurate temperature range from 28℃~42℃. Its measuring distance could reach 0.5~1.2meters
This tiny infrared module integrates the wafer level packaging 120x90 / 17μm uncooled infrared detector. With SDK and USB interface, the LC160 uncooled thermal module can be easy to be integrated for secondary development.
- IR resolution120×90
- IR module for body temperature measurement
- Aluminum alloy exterior, enhancing the heat dissipation efficiency
- IP54, higher protection grade
- With SDK and USB interface, easy for integrated development
Version | LC160 |
IR Resolution | 120×90@17μm |
FOV | 50°×38° |
Focal Length | 2.3mm #F1.1 |
Interface | 4PIN Connector, USB 2.0protocal |
Power Consumption | ≤150mW |
Temperature Accuracy | ±0.5℃ (Environment Temeprature10℃~35℃) |
Temperature Range | 20℃ ~50℃ | Accurate Temperature Range 28~42℃ |
Measuring Distance | 0.5~1.2 meters |
SDK | Android / Linux x86&x64 / Windows x86&x64 |
Authentication | RoHS |
The target customer group is mainly low-end face recognition panel manufacturers (such as clock attendance, access control, gates, etc.) such as this 4-5 inch face recognition panel.
1. What is infrared thermal imaging?
Infrared thermal imaging is a method of using infrared radiation and thermal energy to gather information about objects, in order to formulate images of them, or get temperature information of the objects, even in low visibility environments.
2. How does Infrared Thermal Imaging Work?
Infrared thermal imaging system is a passive non-contact detection and identification of infrared technology. It focuses the infrared radiation of the scene on the focal plane array infrared detector through the infrared optical system that can pass through infrared radiation. The thermal detector converts the radiation signal of different intensity into the corresponding electrical signal, and then through amplification and video processing, forms the infrared image that can be observed by the naked eyes.