Design and Characteristics of a Thin-Film ThermoMesh for the Efficient Embedded Sensing of a Spatio-Temporally Sparse Heat Source
Abstract
This work presents ThermoMesh, a passive thin-film thermoelectric mesh sensor designed to detect and characterize spatio-temporally sparse heat sources through conduction-based thermal imaging. The device integrates thermoelectric junctions with linear or nonlinear interlayer resistive elements to perform simultaneous sensing and in-sensor compression. We focus on the single-event (1-sparse) operation and define four performance metrics: range, efficiency, sensitivity, and accuracy. Numerical modeling shows that a linear resistive interlayer flattens the sensitivity distribution and improves minimum sensitivity by approximately tenfold for a 16×16 mesh. Nonlinear temperature-dependent interlayers further enhance minimum sensitivity at scale: a ceramic negative-temperature-coefficient (NTC) layer over 973-1273K yields a 14,500× higher minimum sensitivity than the linear design at a 200×200 mesh, while a VO2 interlayer modeled across its metal-insulator transition (MIT) over 298-373K yields a 24× improvement. Using synthetic 1-sparse datasets with white boundary-channel noise at a signal-to-noise ratio of 40dB, the VO2 case achieved 98\% localization accuracy, a mean absolute temperature error of 0.23K, and a noise-equivalent temperature (NET) of 0.07K. For the ceramic-NTC case no localization errors were observed under the tested conditions, with a mean absolute temperature error of 1.83K and a NET of 1.49K. These results indicate that ThermoMesh could enable energy-efficient embedded thermal sensing in scenarios where conventional infrared imaging is limited, such as molten-droplet detection or hot-spot monitoring in harsh environments.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.