Isaac -
I don't know if you are dealing with an issue of confidentiality, but it strikes me that you are spoon feeding us information and getting mixed guidance as a result. If you can give us a fuller picture of what you need to do, on what, and with what, I think you will get better guidance. Your recent post about the silicon with all the holes and your use of the aluminum as a substitute for testing was, I think, critical.
The fact that they are both shiny or polished, does not mean that aluminum is a good substitute for silicon in your test development. As John Lefeber's referenced graph shows, the emissivity of silicon is no worse than about 0.2 in the waveband of your camera. This is many times higher than polished aluminum. Polished aluminum is therefore a much more difficult material to successfully image than the silicon. In addition, you note that the the silicon has many small holes in it. These will, if they are deep enough and frequent enough, give you a much higher emissivity than the unaltered silicon or the graph referenced by John.
If possible, I suggest you get a sample of the silicon that can be "wasted", that is, that you will be allowed to touch and handle. Do your testing with it.
Not all shiny surfaces are low emissivity. Try looking at the data side of a CD. Under the transparent coating it is an aluminum disk, however the data writing process generates many small holes that end up giving it a usable emissivity.
Jack
Jack M. Kleinfeld, P.E.
Kleinfeld Technical Services, Inc.
Bronx, NY
718-884-6644
JKEngineer@KleinfeldTechnical.com
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