Showing posts with label commercialization of terahertz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label commercialization of terahertz. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Real-time layer thickness measurement with terahertz


                           
The photograph shows the T-Sweeper and the fast tunable laser source Finisar® WaveSource™ © Fraunhofer HHIas part of the setup used to demonstrate the layer thickness measurement.

Anne Rommel Pressestelle
https://idw-online.de/de/news692605
    Terahertz is a key technology for non-destructive material testing. Major advantages are examinations without physical contact and the analysis of complex systems with a low contrast range, in which established methods like ultrasonic usually fail. The Fraunhofer Heinrich Hertz Institute HHI has successfully developed a cost-efficient and compact measurement system that conducts real-time measurements of the thickness of multi-layer systems for the first time, an essential technology e.g. for lacquering lines. The new terahertz measurement system T-Sweeper will be presented live at the Hannover Messe trade fair from April 23 to 27, 2018 (Fraunhofer booth C22, hall 2).
    Terahertz radiation was already a major topic a good ten years ago, in connection with body scanners for inspecting passengers during airport security screening. Terahertz radi-ation was also to be used in measurement systems for material testing and inspection of components. However, in spite of high expectations the breakthrough for terahertz technology took a long time. Compared to classical methods for non-destructive material testing today, such as X-ray radiation and ultrasonic, terahertz was long considered simp-ly too expensive. In recent years however, great progress has been made: An increasing number of systems has been introduced with designs based on standard components, making them significantly more economical to build. These developments are already raising the interest of potential users. System costs certainly will have to be cut further and the complexity of the systems will have to be reduced before terahertz technologies are established as an instrument in industrial process monitoring.

    Cost-efficient and in real-time

    Current developments at the Fraunhofer HHI could mean a considerable boost for the terahertz technology. A research team led by Björn Globisch, head of the terahertz research group at Fraunhofer HHI, has successfully developed a measuring device that replaces the previously used femtosecond pulse laser with compact continuous-wave laser technology. The fact that this continuous-wave measurement system is capable of eight measurements per second is key to allow real-time measurements without the use of a pulsed laser for the first time. The scientists will present this terahertz measurement system at the Hannover Messe trade fair and will give a live demonstration of non-contact layer thickness measurement for various multi-layer systems.

    The principle employed by the Fraunhofer HHI to generate terahertz radiation is based on an optoelectronic process. Using a special semiconductor component, the beat of two continuous-wave lasers is converted into terahertz radiation, which corresponds exactly to the difference frequency of the two lasers.

    The lack of significant success of terahertz technology in the past is largely due to the properties of the semiconductors used. These properties could initially only be achieved with materials that required illumination at a wavelength of 800 nanometers. This rather exotic wavelength means both the lasers and the optical components of the terahertz system are much too expensive and not robust enough for industrial applications.

    Widespread wavelength standard

    "This is why we developed a semiconductor that can be excited by laser light at a wave-length of 1.5 micrometers," explains Globisch. "This matches the wavelength standard in optical telecommunications technologies, which means there are plenty of cost-effective and high-quality optical components and lasers available." On the way to a competitively viable terahertz system for material testing, however, another obstacle had to be overcome: The pulse laser, on which all conventional real-time capable terahertz systems are based, is a decisive cost factor in existing systems. Femtosecond lasers are not only technologically complicated and expensive on their own, terahertz spectrometers using pulsed lasers require additional optomechanical components that have to be precisely produced and adjusted in highly complex procedures.

    One alternative is continuous-wave spectroscopy, in which continuous-wave radiation is generated instead of a terahertz pulse. Two continuous-wave laser sources are mixed and their beat signal is converted into terahertz radiation in a special semiconductor de-vice. The wavelength of the terahertz radiation generated can be easily modified by changing the relationship of the laser wavelengths to one another. Continuous-wave systems have two decisive advantages compared to pulsed terahertz systems: First, the laser sources themselves are more compact and less expensive; second, no optomechan-ical components are needed in order to operate the system.

    Continuous-wave terahertz systems are already available, but they need periods ranging from several seconds to a matter of minutes to capture a measured signal. In contrast, industrial applications often operate like this: In the production, a robot arm moves over measurement points on painted/coated components and measures the coating thickness. Since the production cycle has to be maintained, there is only little time per measuring point. Until now, the measurement speed of continuous-wave terahertz systems was too slow to be viable in non-destructive testing applications.

    Fraunhofer HHI has solved this problem using lasers that can be adjusted extremely fast (Finisar® WaveSource™) and by modifying electronics, data capture and algorithms to accommodate the high speeds required. This combination has increased measurement speeds by a factor of 160 compared to previous systems. This has made it possible for the first time to conduct material testing in real-time with continuous-wave terahertz systems. This system will be presented at the Hannover Messe trade fair in a live demonstration.

    Application example: layer thickness measurement

    Inspection of paints and coatings is an important application of non-contact terahertz measurement technologies. Here, layer thickness measurement makes up a significant part of quality assurance and production monitoring. Thus, for example, minimum thickness is ensured, consumption of resources is optimized by reducing the amount of excess material used and subsequent rectifications are avoided. Today, manual eddy current devices can be used with metallic substrates such as automotive sheet metal. This meth-od however, fails on poorly conductive fiber-reinforced composites. Ultrasound finds application in this context, but at the costs of mechanical contact. "There is a substantial need for a reliable measurement technique," says Globisch, "because the market for fiber-reinforced composites is growing in the automotive, aeronautics and wind power sectors." This is where the major advantage of the terahertz technology lies: Measurements are non-destructive and contactless, so that even coatings that are not completely dried can be measured as well. In addition, the quality of the results is not dependent on temperature and multi-layer systems can be directly resolved. Finally, terahertz radiation is non-ionizing and not harmful to humans due to its low power.

    Although the new terahertz measurement system can be built using cost-effective standard optical components, it is currently even more expensive than for example ultrasonic devices, which are manufactured in quantities of several hundreds of thousands. "How-ever, the prices will become similar with future series production," Globisch predicts. The advantages of the measurement technique and the current progress have convinced the researcher that the terahertz method will establish itself as a measurement technique for non-destructive material testing in the years to come.


    At Hannover Messe, Fraunhofer HHI acts as a representative for the FMD.

    Weitere Informationen:

    Monday, March 19, 2018

    LUNA Blog-Come see our multilayer online demonstration at Thin Wall Packaging




    http://lunainc.com/multilayer-online-demonstration-thin-wall-packaging/

    The T-Ray® 5000 T-Gauge® can measure all layers to micron precision, and can measure a buried layer to less than 25 microns.
    This application is particularly useful in blow-molded products (bottles, cups, preforms, etc.).  The blow molding industry is large, and technologies that can measure buried layers, even on opaque products, have not existed until now.
    With the high acquisition speed of the T-Ray 5000, this capability can be deployed online, measuring the cups or bottles as they pass. 
    TeraMetrix™ will be at Thin Wall Packaging 2018 at the Westin Chicago North Shore on 20 and 21 March. 
    We will be showing a live demonstration of online multilayer thickness measurement integrated with the IMD BTIR OEM online barrier imaging system, from IMDvista, and a daylight camera to provide unparalleled information about the internal barrier layer.



    We are pleased to be recognized by IMDvista, a leader in online process control for the blow molding industry.  The integration of our product provides quantitative evaluation of the images provided by the BTIR OEM camera. 
    Don’t miss out on this exciting new technology, come and see us in Chicago.

    Wednesday, October 11, 2017

    HÜBNER Photonics cements distribution network


    http://optics.org/press/3742

    HÜBNER Photonics, a division of the HÜBNER Group, is pleased to announce an expansion of their sales channels around the world. Recently appointing Lahat Technologies Ltd in Israel, Laser Lines Ltd in UK, DynaSense Photonics Ltd in China and Optoprim SAS in France, HÜBNER Photonics’ goal is to align their distribution network with that of their leading laser technology company, Cobolt AB.
    The new distributors will represent either the whole or a part of HÜBNER Photonics’ product portfolio, including the award winning C-WAVE tunable laser, C-FLEX laser combiner, Terahertz based T-SpectralyzerTM and high frequency based systems, like the post scanner T-SENSETM.
    About HÜBNER Photonics
    HÜBNER Photonics is the youngest division of HÜBNER Group, consolidating all global activities in the photonics markets. HÜBNER Photonics offers a wide range of Cobolt lasers, the tunable cw-laser C-WAVE, plus new solutions in the fields of terahertz imaging, high frequency systems and radar. These products help enhance human well-being and security, increase quality and efficiency in industrial processes and improve our environment. HÜBNER is headquartered in Kassel, Germany

    Contact


    HÜBNER Photonics
    Heinrich-Hertz-Straße 2
    34123 Kassel
    Germany
    Tel.: +49 561 998-0

    Thursday, November 10, 2016

    LUNA INNOVATIONS-Q3 Conference call -Is the Terahertz Division being ignored?



    My Note-I wasn't able to be a part of the LUNA innovations Q3 Conference call yesterday, and I am very disappointed in the complete lack of news about the Luna terahertz division in Ann Arbor. The Seeking Alpha transcript of the call as it relates to terahertz is found below, and was limited to a single comment by My Chung to a question, which I have re-posted below. The short comment sounds positive but come on! Let's get some news out about developments in THz at LUNA!

    http://seekingalpha.com/article/4021961-luna-innovations-luna-ceo-chung-q3-2016-results-earnings-call-transcript?part=single

    Gregg Hillman
    And I'm not sure -- early in the call did you talk about Terahertz as a segment earlier in the call?
    My Chung
    No we left that out. It's not on purpose per say that part of our business is actually doing very well. They're getting very good traction, there was an article in fact recently talking about Terahertz technology, Wright-Patterson Air Force Base that just happens to be our technology. So we’re gaining traction in it, that team is working very well and we're making progress but it's not as high of a revenue stream as we are achieving today on the high speed optical receiver side.
    Gregg Hillman
    Is that division breakeven? The Terahertz division?
    My Chung
    Not yet, getting close but not quite there yet.
    (My Note): The Wright-Patterson Air Force news, referred to by My Chung was posted here-

    Monday, October 31, 2016

    Technology May Rescue Male Baby Chicks From The Grinder






    Matt O'Hayer thought he was in the idyllic part of the egg business. He's CEO of Vital Farms, based in Austin, Texas, which markets eggs from hens that run around outdoors, on grassy pastures, at about a hundred different farms.
    "I thought that there's nothing more beautiful than eggs, where you have sort of a symbiotic relationship; you take care of the hen and she gives you this little gift every day," says O'Hayer.
    Until a few years ago, he never thought about where those hens come from, or what happened to their male siblings.
    Then he ran into a couple of people from the animal rights group PETA.
    "I told them what I was doing for a living, and they said, 'Oh, that's horrific,' " O'Hayer recalls. "And I said, 'Why's that?' And they said, 'Because of what happens to the male chicks!'"
    That's when O'Hayer learned about something that happens at the hatcheries that supply his farmers with hens.
    Those hatcheries incubate fertile eggs from breeding flocks, in order to raise more egg-laying hens. Their breed of chicken is only used to lay eggs, not for meat.


    "It's bred to lay eggs, and not to gain weight," O'Hayer says. "They're lean, mean, egg-laying machines." So all they want are the female chicks. "The male has no value."
    But there's no way, right now, to screen the fertilized eggs to see which embryos are male or female. Instead, teams of workers inspect each chick immediately after it hatches. They keep the females. But the males — brace yourself — get killed instantly in a machine that grinds them up. In the U.S., about 300 million male chicks from egg-laying breeds are killed each year.
    O'Hayer was horrified. He started looking for a way to end this. And he wasn't alone.
    "It's been an issue that the international egg industry has been dealing with and trying to find commercially available and economically feasible solutions for years," says Chad Gregory, president of the United Egg Producers, which represents most egg producers in the U.S.
    The industry has been under pressure from animal welfare groups, but there's also a profit motive. Incubating, hatching and then destroying male chicks wastes money. Last summer, the UEP announced that it would try to end the practice of killing male chicks "by 2020 or as soon as it is commercially available and economically feasible."
    O'Hayer now believes that he has the answer.
    Vital Farms teamed up with an Israeli company called Novatrans and found a way to analyze the chemical makeup of gases that leak from the pores of an egg and determine the sex of the embryo inside. "We are able to trap the gas and read whether it's male, female, or infertile, and do it in a matter of seconds, rather than minutes," says O'Hayer.
    O'Hayer says it's possible to make that determination two days after the egg is laid, before it enters the incubation chamber. At that point, it's still possible to sell the eggs containing male embryos as regular edible eggs. It normally takes 21 days of incubation for an egg to develop into a chick that breaks out of its shell.
    The Vital Farms-Novatrans partnership expects to have a commercial version of this invention up and running within a year.
    By that time, though, it may have competition.
    In Canada, Egg Farmers of Ontario has been funding research by Michael Ngadi, a scientist at McGill University, who's developing a way to determine the sex of embryos by shining light through them. Harry Pelissero, general manager of Egg Farmers of Ontario, told The Salt that the technique could be commercially available within two years. Meanwhile, German researchers are working on yet another approach.
    David Coman-Hidy, executive director of the Humane League, an animal-welfare advocacy group, says there has been a wave of technical innovation aimed at this problem, just within the past year. Last summer, he says, he hoped to get the egg industry to promise to stop killing male chicks by the year 2020. But "now that we've seen these new folks trying to get these contracts as soon as possible, I think we may see this change happen even sooner."
    According to Chad Gregory, from the United Egg Producers, there's huge demand within the egg industry for a way to solve this problem, and the first company to create a solution could earn a lot of money. "Over time, worldwide, it could be worth billions of dollars," he says.

    Friday, September 23, 2016

    How terahertz radiation could help brands identify consumers in future


    We catch up one of the latest emerging technologies, terahertz radiation, and its future application in recognising individuals

    http://www.cmo.com.au/article/607397/how-terahertz-radiation-could-help-brands-identify-consumers-future/

    Marketers have longed dreamed of being able to identify every one of their customers, regardless of how they are interacting.
    It is a capability that digital technology has delivered in the online world, but as yet no method has proven effective for the vast majority of offline interactions. Facial and mobile device recognition have both yet to become sufficiently accurate to deliver a positive ID against a known identity in all situations.
    But what if you could recognise a person by their own unique chemical signature?
    It’s not a crazy as it sounds.
    Data61 researcher, Ken Smart, has been investigating the uses of terahertz radiation for 15 years as a scanning and detection technology.
    “It has the ability to penetrate opaque materials, such as packaging and things like that,” Smart says. “You can look for voids inside of materials, or you can look for corrosion under paint. And it has a high sensitivity to liquids, so you can tell the water content of the thing you are looking at.”
    All of that makes terahertz scanners particularly adept at instantly detecting substances like pesticide on fruit. Smart says this is of huge value to the agricultural sector, where some traditional chemical tests might take up to 24 hours to deliver a result – an appalling delay for anyone wanting to sell perishable goods.

    “If you can determine how much is there within minutes, you have an advantage,” Smart says.
    The technology could also be used to detect counterfeit food, such as when expensive fish are substituted with cheaper ones in restaurants. It has also been used to scan beneath works of art to determine what might have been painted over, by identifying the individual pigments.
    The terahertz radiation band sits between the millimetre radiation band, often used for full body scanners at airports, and the optical radiation band used by human eyes. It is a non-ionising form of radiation, meaning it is safer than some other scanning techniques, such as those that use x-rays.
    That terahertz radiation is only now being considered for commercial applications is due to recent breakthroughs which have made it easier to create devices with the power profile needed to work with it.

    “It’s easier now to make high power devices, so you get stronger penetration and it is easier to see different things,” Smart says. “As you go up in frequency the wavelength gets smaller so your resolution increases, and you can see finer detail that you can’t capture at lower frequencies.
    “You get to see an almost-unique signature. The more refined a substance is, the more unique its signature is. But once you start combining substances it gets a little murkier to tease out which one is which.”
    Smart says the power profile of terahertz scanners also make standoff testing difficult, with an effective range of ten metres.
    “So when it gets beyond that you have atmospheric effects and all sorts of things working against you,” Smart says. “But as people work their way around some of these problems there can be solutions found.”

    And while it can scan through cloth and paper, it can’t penetrate metallic objects.
    Despite the possibilities, however, the murkiness and range issue mean it may be some time before shop owners are identifying visitors by their unique chemical signature.
    “That’s in the future, quite a long way,” Smart says.

    Tuesday, August 2, 2016

    EOTPR 5000 launches at SEMICON West, USA.


    http://terahertzspectroscopyandimaging.blogspot.com/2016/08/eotpr-5000-launches-at-semicon-west-usa.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TerahertzSpectroscopyAndImaging+%28terahertz+spectroscopy+and+imaging%29

    This year's SEMICON West event in San Francisco saw the launch of our fully automated integrated circuit (IC) package inspection system, the EOTPR 5000

    Building on the success of the EOTPR 2000 which has an established track record in the industry for rapid fault isolation and manual inspection, the EOTPR 5000 is a fully automated advanced IC package inspection system that utilizes TeraView’s proprietary EOTPR terahertz technology to detect weak or marginal interconnect quality in high volume manufacturing environments, which no other technology can detect today.


    Don Arnone, TeraView CEO, spoke to Philip Stoten of EMSNowTV (above) to discuss what drove the technology and how it is currently being depolyed.

    Thursday, July 14, 2016

    Terahertz automated IC packaging inspection system



    By Peter Clarke


    TeraView Ltd. (Cambridge, England), a pioneer of systems based on the terahertz frequency electromagnetic waves is introducing an automated IC packaging inspection system at Semicon West.
    Building on the success of the EOTPR 2000, which has been used in laboratories for fault isolation and manual inspection, the EOTPR 5000 is an automated IC packaging inspection system for the detection of weak or marginal interconnect quality in high volume manufacturing environments.
    TeraView was founded in 2001 as a spin off from Cambridge University and Toshiba Research Europe and has worked over the subsequent years to identify market opportunities for the use of terahertz technology. Electro Optical Terahertz Pulse Reflectometry (EOTPR) is a time domain reflectometry system that has been developed by TeraView and Intel.
    The EOTPR 5000 is able to detect sub-optimal conditions such as "head-in-pillow" structures on solder balls that may not be detected by electrical continuity testing.
    "This product will be the first terahertz system ever to be deployed in a mass production environment.  It will be deployed to detect weak or marginal interconnects in the advanced IC packages which no other testers or inspection equipment can detect, said Don Arnone, TeraView CEO, in a statement.
    TeraView said it will start beta testing of the EOTPR 5000 at an IC manufacturer's site in Asia soon to demonstrate it is fit for 24 by 7 manufacturing and units ill be available for customers early in 2017.
    As well as cooperating with Intel on the development of EOTPR TeraView has received financial backing from Samsung.

    Friday, May 20, 2016

    Terahertz technology market is growing with TeraSense!


    http://terasense.com/news/terahertz-technology-market-is-growing-with-terasense/

    TeraSense has recently hit the pages in a survey by Research and Markets, one of the leading market research agencies in the world. The survey mentioned a dozen of the most salient companies in the THz community, such as Advanced Photonix, Inc.; Menlo Systems GmbH, Microtech Instrument Inc., QMC Instruments Ltd., Teraview,  Toptica Photonics AG,  Digital Barriers PLC,  Advantest Corporation, ACAL PLC,  and, of course, Terasense, as one of the key player in this innovative industry.
     In its May 2016 issue of market survey the agency reports that terahertz technology market is expected to grow at Cumulative Annual Growth of 31.83% between 2016 and 2022 to reach USD 489.8 Million by 2022. 
     Terasese, as a leading manufacturer of innovative portable Terahertz (THz) imaging systems, cameras, detectors and generators, is very pleased to know that the market for THz imaging is expected to hold a major share of the overall terahertz technology market (by type) in 2016 and grow at a significant rate between 2016 and 2022. The low photon energy of terahertz electromagnetic waves make them non-ionizing and harmless even after over exposure to them. This factor is obviously driving the growth of the market for terahertz imaging.
     According to Research and Markets the other key drivers responsible for the growth of this market include the increase in demand for terahertz technology-based products in the defense & homeland security andmedical sectors and the high adoption rate of these products for laboratory research applications. The increasing awareness about the optoelectronic approaches based on modern laser technologies as well as high-power electronic emitters help the terahertz technology market grow.
    Report1The continuous developments in the technology due to focused research carried out in various universities worldwide create more opportunities for the adoption of terahertz technology for various new applications such as food quality inspection. However, the report also points out that for such research, there is a need for more precise products. This requirement proves to be the key driving factor for the growth of the market for laboratory research applications.
     The survey entitled - Terahertz Technology Market by Type - Terahertz Imaging, …Analysis & Forecast to 2022 – has a lot of other very encouraging and interesting conclusions.
    Needless to say that Terasense is happy to be recognized as one of the world companies shaping the terahertz industry and influencing the development of respective applications in various industrial and scientific fields.

    Wednesday, May 11, 2016

    Abstract-Highly sensitive terahertz dielectric sensor for small-volume liquid samples




    a) Author to whom correspondence should be addressed. Electronic mail: enrique@cio.mx

    Appl. Phys. Lett. 108, 191105 (2016)http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4949527

    We present a resonator-based sensor for the measurement of the refractive index of dielectric liquidsamples. The proposed sensor operates on the basis of an electromagnetic resonance between a thinmetallic grating and a reflecting ground plane. The fluid whose refractive index is to be measured fills the region between the metallic grating and the ground plane and causes a considerable shift in the resonance frequency (>500 GHz/RIU). The sensor has a relatively simple structure; therefore, it can be manufactured economically on industrial scales.

    Friday, April 1, 2016

    Terahertz technology reaches industrial maturity


    http://www.fraunhofer.de/en/press/research-news/2016/april/terahertz-technology.html

    Terahertz is a new technology in which nondestructive testing of components and surfaces is possible. Until now, these devices and, in particular, the sensor heads have been expensive and unwieldy. Researchers at Fraunhofer have now succeeded in making sensor heads more compact and, thus, cheaper, which facilitates their handling considerably. First prototypes are already being used for the production of plastic pipes. They are also very well suited for analyzing coatings of fiber composites. From April 25 to 29, 2016, these new sensor heads are being presented at the Hannover Messe (Hall 2, Stand C16/C22).
    © Photo Fraunhofer HHI
    The researchers at Fraunhofer have packaged the transmitting and receiving unit for terahertz radiation into a handy little sensor head with a diameter of only 25 and a length of 35 millimeters

    The researchers at Fraunhofer have packaged the transmitting and receiving unit for terahertz radiation into a handy little sensor head with a diameter of only 25 and a length of 35 millimeters.
    More than ten years ago, terahertz technology was the next big thing. Back then there was a lot of talk about ‚nude‘ body scanners. People thought that the devices that were being installed at airports were going to make revealing images of passengers. Moreover, scientists were hoping to develop measurement systems for material testing and inspection of components using terahertz radiation. Despite all these great expectations, the long-awaited breakthrough for terahertz technology did not come about. Compared to the conventional methods currently used for non-destructive testing, such as X-ray or ultrasound, terahertz technology is simply too expensive, unwieldy and overall impractical.

    Measuring system with the innovative sensor head

    The latest developments of the Fraunhofer Institute for Telecommunication, Heinrich Hertz Institut, HHI in Berlin, could now give terahertz technology a decisive boost. The research team of Thorsten Göbel, who heads the Terahertz Research Group at HHI, has succeeded in developing terahertz devices that for the first time are made from standard and therefore low-cost components and are also relatively easy to handle. At the Hannover Messe, the experts will be presenting a terahertz measuring system with an innovative sensor head, which allows easy testing of various components, such as plastic tubes. The principle employed by Fraunhofer HHI for generating terahertz radiation is based on an optoelectronic method. Using a special semiconductor, laser light pulses are converted into electrical terahertz pulses that are only one billionth of a second long.
    The reason for the lack of success of the terahertz technology until now is mainly due to the required properties of the semiconductors being used. These could only be achieved with materials that required an illumination with a wavelength of 800 nanometers. Both the terahertz system‘s laser and optical components are too expensive and not robust enough for industrial use when using this rather exotic wavelength.

    Commonly used wavelength standard

    “Therefore, we have developed a semiconductor that can be stimulated with a laser light centered around a wavelength of 1.5 micrometers,” says Göbel. “In optical communications, this wavelength is standard, which is why there is large number of inexpensive and high-quality optical components and lasers on the market.”
    However, one obstacle needed to be overcome on the way to creating an affordable and handy terahertz system for testing materials. Until now, the sensor head for scanning components was too big and heavy for easy handling. The reason: the terahertz transmitter and the receiver were two separate components that had to be mounted in a casing with great effort and precision. The main disadvantage of this arrangement was that samples can only be measured at an angle. Therefore, the object had to be exactly in focus of the transmitter and receiver so that the terahertz signal sent from the transmitter via the sample could be displayed on the receiver. If the distance between the sensor head and the sample changes, for example due to vibrations, it becomes more difficult to measure.
    The Fraunhofer HHI experts have solved this problem by manufacturing an integrated chip that can transmit and receive simultaneously. Now it is possible to use a single optical lens that focuses on the object, which allows for a flexible operating distance. The researchers packed this transmitting and receiving unit, the transceiver, into a handy little sensor head with a diameter of only 25 and a length of 35 millimeter. The device will be presented at the Hannover trade fair.
    Moreover, these terahertz sensor system prototypes have been in use by manufacturers of plastic pipes for some time now. These sensors are directly used in the production line to monitor the thickness of the pipe walls. If the walls are too thin, the pipe becomes unstable. If they are too thick, valuable plastic is wasted. Up to now, the production of plastic pipes has been monitored using an ultrasound system. Since ultrasound cannot measure correctly in the air, water is needed. Similarly to the ultrasound gel doctors use, the water works as a coupling medium between the ultrasound sensor head and the pipe. Therefore, the nearly 250-degree Celsius pipes must be dragged through a water tank. In addition, the ultrasound technology also fails with so-called intelligent pipes that are constructed from a wide-range of layers of different materials.

    Another future application is the verification of paints and coatings on fiber reinforced composite materials. Today, it is possible to use handy eddy current equipment on metallic substrates, such as sheet metal for the automotive industry. However, this method fails on poorly conducting fiber composites. “The need for a reliable measurement process is enormous,” says Göbel, “because the market for composite materials is growing in the automotive, aircraft and wind energy industries.”
    Although the new terahertz sensor system is constructed from inexpensive standard optical components, it is currently more expensive than, for example, ultrasonic devices, which are manufactured in quantities of many hundreds of thousands. “However, the price will drop in the future when volume production starts picking up,” Göbel predicts. Given the advantages of the measuring method and the current advances, Göbel believes that the terahertz method will be successfully established in the coming years