Thank you all so much for replying.
@Fraser
it seems like there is much more to a thermal camera, than I can just find in a data sheet. Like optics/lens, contrast and MTBF. Therefore, I am very thankful for your help and input!
@frott
The Optris NETD is not that great, however. The Optris is designed for industrial process lines and harsh environments. If you don't need that and you can just have a significantly less robust plastic construction with no IP rating, then there are other options.
I do not need any robust construction nor a special IP rating. The camera will be used in a laboratory and will never be near water. The temperature and humidity are controlled and should also not influence the camera.
Being honest, is your requirement "please give me as much frame rate and resolution for as cheap as possible"?
The frame rate is my least concern, because the heating is relatively slow process. Even one picture per second would be more than fast enough. Right now I use Thermocouples to measure the temperature and I record the data every 10 s and this is fast enough.
Resolution is also not my mayor concern, but because I do not have any experience with thermal cameras, I want to understand why certain cameras cost so much more and how I can determine the quality of a camera. Since I'm new in this field, I do not have experience and don't know: Oh yeah, company A is known for high quality. And better be careful with company X.
Do you need radiometric data? If you don't need radiometric accuracy and just need to see temp differences, then things get a lot cheaper. The radiometric requirement is a huge cost adder.
Do I need radiometric data... good question. I want to measure the temperature distribution at the surface of the contact system. It should be possible to tell if the upper part of the contact is 1K, 5 K or 10 K cooler.
Could you provide some more details about the geometry. Not only the contacts but also the elements around.
I cannot show pictures of the contact system, but the contacts are pressed together in an open frame (no closed housing). The diameter of the contacts is about 50 mm. The height overall is about 150 mm.
If there is need for temperature measurement, there is always a critical accuracy level. It will only be different in different cases. What will by your acceptable error level?
The temperature will be between 20°C and about 150°C. If the absolute value is within +-3 K everything is fine. But the camera should me capable to measure a temperature difference of 1 K.
Not a good idea, since it has a non negligible thickness and is not a good heat conductor. Another question is the geometry around. Do we have a cavity effect and/or reflections?
As mentioned before, the observed process is pretty slow, so I assume, that the thermal conductivity of heat shrink has only a small influence on the measurement. From my experience: the temperature will change 1-2 K (max) in 10 s.
Since it is an open frame, I don't expect cavity. Reflections can be partially expected: two small metal rods are in some distance to the contact system, but they can be shielded.
Does it mean you want to close the circuit and let it operate for a few days, recording temperature distribution?
Yes, more or less. I will start the measurement, wait until I reach equilibrium. Switch the current off, wait until it cools down. Then repeat the hole process many times. I expect that such a measurement will need a couple off days, (more than three days). So it is important to have a stable and reliable system, that can run for days.