Optical SensorsOptical sensors detect electromagnetic radiation withwavelength between 0.2 μm (ultraviolet) and several 10 μm (far infrared). Two different classes of optical sensor applications have to be distinguished. In the first group of applications the light source is given by external conditions of the application, e.g. the sun as a source of visible light or the human body as a source of far infrared radiation in the range of 5 μm to 10 μm. These are applications with an external light source. In most of these cases the purpose of the optical sensors is to measure the intensity of this electromagnetic radiation like a photometer in a photo camera. The radiation is converted into an electrical signal which is a measure of the intensity of the electromagnetic radiation. Since the different types of optical sensors only cover a certain bandwidth, the most important task for the engineer is to select a sensor with a sensitivity range that matches the spectral distribution of the given light source. The second group are applications with an internal light source. The electromagnetic radiation is only a means to an end to detect e.g. the position, size or shape of an object. In this case the sensing system not only contains an optical sensor, but also a light source and the engineer is free in choosing the light source and the optical sensor. Very often it is convenient to choose infrared light between 800 nm and 1000 nm which is not visible for the human eye. For these wavelengths powerful LEDs as a light source are available (see table 1) and the spectral sensitivity of phototransistors and photodiodes made of silicon match perfectly to these infrared LEDs. Well-known examples are optical interrupters where the light, generated by an infrared LED, is detected by a silicon phototransistor. Interlocuteur
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