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14.7: Flat Field Correction (FFC)

  • Page ID
    57977
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    FFC is essential for maintaining image quality and measurement consistency. Without proper correction, thermal images may display non-uniform patterns such as streaking, shading, or blotchy areas that are unrelated to the actual temperature of the target. These artifacts can obscure real thermal patterns or be mistaken for valid indications.

    Because detector response can drift due to ambient temperature changes, camera warm-up, or changing scene conditions, periodic FFC helps ensure that the camera’s output remains reliable during an inspection.

    FFC and Thermal Image Data Acquisition

    Flat Field Correction affects how thermal data is captured, not how it is interpreted. Performing FFC at appropriate times:

    · Improves image clarity and uniformity

    · Reduces sensor-induced artifacts

    · Supports consistent temperature measurement across the field of view

    Failure to allow FFC to occur, especially during large temperature changes or long inspections, can degrade image quality and reduce confidence in the data.

    Level I Operational Awareness

    At the Thermography Level I level:

    · Be aware when FFC is occurring (automatic or manual)

    · Allow FFC to complete before capturing critical images

    · Avoid capturing images during an FFC cycle

    · Document unusual image artifacts if FFC was delayed or disabled

    FFC does not correct focus errors, excessive distance, motion blur, or improper temperature range selection. It is a sensor stabilization process, not a substitute for proper inspection technique.


    This page titled 14.7: Flat Field Correction (FFC) is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Jay Seidel.