What Is Thermographic Inspection?
Thermographic inspection is the use of infrared imaging cameras to detect, measure, and visualize thermal patterns on equipment surfaces and structural components. Every object with a temperature above absolute zero emits infrared radiation, and the intensity of that radiation is a function of the object’s surface temperature and emissivity. Infrared cameras convert this invisible radiation into visible thermal images — thermograms — that reveal temperature distributions across equipment surfaces with resolution as fine as 0.05 degrees Celsius. When a component is operating abnormally — a loose electrical connection generating resistive heat, a bearing running hot from inadequate lubrication, a refractory lining thinning and allowing heat to escape — the resulting thermal anomaly is visible in the thermogram even when the component appears normal to the naked eye.
The physics of infrared thermography make it an inherently non-contact, non-intrusive inspection method. Data is collected from a safe distance without touching the equipment, interrupting its operation, or introducing any energy into the system. This is a significant advantage over many other inspection technologies — it means thermographic surveys can be performed on energized electrical systems, operating mechanical equipment, and active process systems without shutdown, de-energization, or lockout/tagout. A single thermographer with a properly calibrated camera can survey hundreds of components per day, making it one of the most time-efficient condition assessment technologies available.
Quantitative vs. Qualitative Thermography
The distinction between quantitative and qualitative thermography is important for understanding what different levels of survey rigor can deliver. Qualitative thermography identifies thermal anomalies through comparative analysis — comparing similar components under similar load conditions and flagging those that are significantly hotter or cooler than their peers. A qualitative survey of a motor control center, for example, compares the thermal signatures of similar breakers carrying similar loads and identifies any that show elevated temperatures relative to the population. This approach is effective for screening large numbers of components quickly and does not require precise knowledge of the surface emissivity of each component.
Quantitative thermography goes further by measuring actual surface temperatures with calibrated accuracy. This requires the thermographer to account for the emissivity of the target surface, the reflected apparent temperature from surrounding heat sources, the distance between the camera and target, and the atmospheric conditions (temperature, humidity, and transmittance of the air column). When these factors are properly compensated, quantitative thermography provides temperature measurements accurate to within plus or minus 2 degrees Celsius or 2% of the reading — accuracy that is necessary for severity classification against defined temperature rise criteria, for trending temperature changes over time, and for comparing measured temperatures against manufacturer specifications or electrical code limits.
Our thermographic inspection services are quantitative. We calibrate for emissivity, reflected temperature, and environmental conditions at every measurement point. This rigor is essential for defensible severity classification and for generating temperature trends that are meaningful over months and years.
The Emissivity Factor
Incorrect emissivity compensation is the most common source of temperature measurement error in industrial thermography.
Emissivity — the ratio of infrared energy emitted by a surface compared to a theoretical perfect emitter (blackbody) at the same temperature — is the single most important variable in accurate temperature measurement with infrared cameras. Emissivity varies from near zero (highly polished metals, which emit very little infrared energy relative to their temperature) to near 1.0 (matte painted surfaces, oxidized metals, rubber, and most organic materials, which emit infrared energy very efficiently). A bare aluminum bus bar at 100 degrees Celsius may appear to be at 40 degrees Celsius in a thermogram if the camera’s emissivity setting is defaulted to 0.95 (a common default for general surveys) when the actual emissivity of polished aluminum is 0.05 to 0.10.
This is not an academic concern. Incorrect emissivity compensation is the most common source of temperature measurement error in industrial thermography, and it can cause genuine anomalies to be missed (when low-emissivity surfaces appear cooler than they actually are) or false anomalies to be flagged (when high-reflectivity surfaces reflect heat from nearby sources that the camera interprets as surface temperature). Our thermographers use emissivity reference tables for common industrial materials, apply emissivity correction tape or paint at critical measurement locations where surface emissivity is uncertain, and verify measurements with contact temperature instruments when accuracy is critical. For electrical surveys, we recommend that facilities apply high-emissivity targets (small adhesive patches with a known emissivity of 0.95) at critical connection points to ensure consistent, accurate temperature measurement across repeated surveys.
What Are the Signs Your Facility Needs Thermographic Inspection Services?
Thermographic inspection delivers value across virtually every industrial facility. The following indicators suggest that your facility would benefit from professional thermographic inspection services.
- Your facility has not had a comprehensive infrared survey of its electrical distribution system within the past 12 months — NFPA 70B recommends annual thermographic surveys of electrical systems as a core element of an electrical preventive maintenance program
- You have experienced electrical faults — breaker trips, connection failures, arcing events, or fires — that an infrared survey might have detected before they escalated to failure
- Your insurance carrier has recommended or required thermographic surveys as a condition of coverage or as a basis for premium adjustment
- Electrical equipment is aging — switchgear, motor control centers, transformers, and bus ducts that have been in service for 20 or more years are at elevated risk for connection degradation, insulation breakdown, and contact wear that thermography detects efficiently
- Your facility operates in a corrosive or high-humidity environment where electrical connections are exposed to accelerated degradation from oxidation, moisture, and chemical contamination
- Steam systems, refractory-lined equipment, or insulated piping are part of your facility infrastructure and you lack a systematic method for detecting insulation failures, refractory thinning, or steam leak locations
- Mechanical equipment is experiencing bearing or coupling failures, and you want a complementary technology to supplement vibration monitoring for thermal anomaly detection on housings and enclosures
- Roof condition assessment is needed for flat roofing systems where moisture intrusion beneath the membrane creates detectable thermal patterns during evening surveys as wet insulation retains heat differently than dry insulation
- Your facility is subject to regulatory requirements for electrical system inspection — many jurisdictions and industry standards require periodic thermographic surveys of certain electrical system classes
- You are planning a major outage or turnaround and want pre-outage thermographic data to prioritize electrical and mechanical repairs during the limited maintenance window
Our Thermographic Inspection Approach
Our thermographic inspection services are designed to provide technically rigorous, clearly documented, and immediately actionable findings. We are not selling camera images — we are delivering diagnosed conditions with severity classifications, prioritized repair recommendations, and the supporting thermal and visual documentation needed to justify and plan corrective work.
Survey Planning and Load Requirements
A thermographic inspection is only as valid as the operating conditions under which it is performed. Electrical thermographic surveys must be conducted with circuits under load — a loose connection that generates significant resistive heating at full load may appear completely normal at 25% load because resistive heating is proportional to the square of the current (P = I squared times R). We coordinate with operations to schedule electrical surveys during periods of representative or maximum load. Where load cannot be guaranteed during the survey window, we document the load condition at the time of measurement and note which circuits require resurvey under higher load.
For outdoor surveys, environmental conditions matter. Solar loading on south-facing surfaces can mask or mimic thermal anomalies. Wind cooling on exposed connections reduces surface temperature differentials and can cause real faults to fall below detection thresholds. We schedule outdoor surveys to minimize these effects — early morning before solar loading builds, or during overcast conditions — and we document wind speed and direction as part of the survey record. Indoor electrical surveys are less sensitive to environmental conditions but still require that panels and enclosures be opened (with appropriate safety precautions and arc flash protection) to provide direct line-of-sight to the components being inspected.
Electrical System Surveys
Electrical thermographic surveys are the highest-return application of infrared inspection in most industrial facilities. The survey covers the complete electrical distribution chain from utility service entrance and main switchgear through distribution panels, motor control centers, transformers, bus ducts, disconnect switches, and circuit breaker panels. At each level, we inspect connections, contacts, fuses, breakers, and conductors for thermal anomalies indicating high-resistance conditions.
The failure mechanism behind most electrical thermal findings is straightforward: as a bolted or mechanical electrical connection loosens, corrodes, or oxidizes, its resistance increases. This increased resistance causes the connection to generate heat proportional to the current flowing through it. Left uncorrected, the heat accelerates further oxidation and degradation, the resistance increases further, and the cycle continues until the connection fails — potentially through arcing, melting, or fire. Thermographic inspection interrupts this cycle by detecting the elevated temperature while the condition is still correctable through maintenance actions as simple as re-torquing a connection or cleaning and re-making a corroded contact surface.
Priority 1 conditions — temperature rises exceeding 40 degrees Celsius above reference — require immediate attention and may warrant load reduction or de-energization until repair can be completed.
We classify electrical findings using a severity system aligned with NETA MTS and NFPA 70B criteria based on the temperature rise above reference (a similar component under similar load) and the absolute temperature. Priority 1 conditions — temperature rises exceeding 40 degrees Celsius above reference or absolute temperatures approaching the insulation rating of the conductor — require immediate attention and may warrant load reduction or de-energization until repair can be completed. Priority 2 conditions — temperature rises of 10-40 degrees above reference — should be repaired at the next available opportunity, typically within 30 days. Priority 3 conditions — temperature rises below 10 degrees above reference — are noted, documented, and trended at subsequent surveys to determine whether the condition is stable or progressing.
Mechanical Equipment Surveys
Thermographic inspection of mechanical equipment provides a different type of diagnostic information than electrical surveys. Bearing housings, coupling guards, gearbox casings, and motor frames all develop detectable thermal patterns when internal components are generating excess heat from friction, misalignment, lubrication deficiency, or overload. While infrared thermography is not the primary diagnostic technology for most mechanical faults — vibration analysis and oil analysis provide more specific mechanical diagnosis — it serves as a valuable screening tool and as a complementary data source that adds confidence to diagnoses made through other technologies.
Mechanical thermographic surveys are particularly effective for detecting lubrication issues (bearings running hot due to over-greasing, under-greasing, or wrong lubricant), coupling problems (elevated coupling guard temperatures from misalignment), and heat exchanger fouling or bypass (where temperature distribution across the exchanger shell or tube sheet reveals flow maldistribution or internal leakage).
Process and Building Envelope Applications
Beyond electrical and mechanical equipment, thermographic inspection has valuable applications in process monitoring and building envelope assessment. Refractory-lined equipment — kilns, furnaces, reformers, ladles, and reactors — can be surveyed externally to identify areas where refractory deterioration has thinned the insulation barrier, creating hot spots on the outer shell that indicate locations requiring refractory repair during the next outage. Steam and hot-process piping insulation can be assessed for damage, gaps, or moisture saturation by imaging the outer jacket surface for anomalous heat loss patterns. Underground steam line routing can sometimes be verified by imaging ground surface temperatures during winter conditions.
Building envelope surveys — imaging exterior walls and roof surfaces to detect insulation gaps, air leakage, and moisture intrusion — support energy efficiency and structural maintenance. Flat roof surveys conducted during evening cooling periods, after a full day of solar heating, exploit the fact that wet roof insulation retains heat differently than dry insulation, creating a thermal contrast that reveals areas of moisture infiltration beneath the membrane.
What Equipment Is Typically Covered?
Electrical Switchgear and Distribution Equipment
Main switchgear, distribution switchboards, panelboards, bus ducts, and disconnect switches across all voltage levels present in the facility. Low-voltage equipment (below 600V) is inspected with enclosure doors opened for direct line-of-sight access. Medium-voltage equipment (above 600V) may require IR viewing windows installed in enclosure doors to allow inspection without exposing personnel to arc flash hazards — we recommend IR window installation on medium-voltage equipment as a standard practice that enables more frequent and safer surveys.
Motor Control Centers
Individual motor starters, variable frequency drives, soft starters, overload relays, and control transformers within motor control center lineups. MCC buckets represent one of the highest densities of electrical connections in most facilities — each bucket contains power connections, control connections, and overload relay connections — making them a particularly productive survey target. Connection degradation on MCC stab contacts (the plug-in connections between the bucket and the bus) is a common finding on aging MCC equipment.
Power Transformers
Liquid-filled and dry-type transformers, including external bushing connections, cable terminations, tap changer contacts, and cooling system components. External thermographic surveys detect connection anomalies at bushings and cable terminations, blocked or failed cooling fans and radiators, and uneven loading across phases (visible as asymmetric thermal patterns on the tank surface). For liquid-filled transformers, thermographic surveys complement dissolved gas analysis by providing external visual confirmation of thermal conditions that DGA may indicate internally.
Rotating Equipment Bearing Housings
Motor, pump, fan, and compressor bearing housings provide thermal indicators of lubrication condition and bearing health. While infrared cannot diagnose specific bearing defects with the precision of vibration analysis, it reliably detects temperature elevations that indicate friction from lubrication problems, excessive preload, contamination, or advancing defects. Comparative thermal analysis — imaging both bearings on a motor and comparing their temperatures, or comparing identical machines in similar service — is particularly effective for screening large populations of equipment quickly and identifying units that warrant more detailed investigation with vibration and oil analysis.
Steam Traps and Steam Distribution Systems
Thermographic surveys complement ultrasonic steam trap assessment by providing temperature-based confirmation of trap operation. A functioning steam trap maintains a temperature differential between its inlet (at or near steam temperature) and its outlet (at condensate temperature). A failed-open trap shows inlet and outlet at similar steam temperatures. A blocked trap shows the inlet at steam temperature with a cold outlet and upstream condensate backup visible as cooled pipe surfaces. While ultrasonic testing is the primary steam trap diagnostic technology, infrared provides a rapid screening method and a confirmatory data source.
Refractory and Insulation Systems
Kilns, furnaces, boilers, reactors, and insulated piping systems where thermal insulation integrity directly affects energy efficiency, process control, and personnel safety. External shell surveys identify refractory deterioration, insulation damage, and thermal bridging that increases heat loss and may indicate structural concerns. For critical refractory-lined equipment, we establish baseline thermal surveys during commissioning or after reline and trend hot spot development over time to plan refractory maintenance during scheduled outages.
What Results Do Companies Typically See?
Thermographic inspection delivers results that are measurable in terms of faults detected, failures prevented, energy recovered, and safety incidents avoided. The following outcome ranges reflect consistent results across our client base and align with industry benchmarks published by NETA, NFPA, and insurance industry sources.
Initial electrical surveys typically detect 15-30 anomalies per survey at a medium-to-large industrial facility, with findings decreasing to 5-15 as corrective actions take hold.
- Electrical anomaly detection rate of 15-30 findings per survey for a typical medium-to-large industrial facility during the initial survey — this rate typically decreases in subsequent annual surveys as identified conditions are corrected, stabilizing at 5-15 findings per survey as the program matures
- Electrical fire risk reduction — insurance industry data correlates regular thermographic inspection programs with a significant reduction in electrical fire incidents, with multiple insurance carriers offering premium adjustments for facilities that maintain annual survey programs
- Unplanned electrical outage reduction of 40-60% as high-resistance connections, deteriorating contacts, and overloaded circuits are identified and corrected during planned maintenance rather than through emergency response after a trip or fault event
- Refractory and insulation energy savings of 5-15% at the equipment level when thermographic surveys identify and drive correction of insulation failures, refractory hot spots, and thermal bridging on process equipment and steam distribution systems
- Steam system loss identification when thermographic surveys are combined with ultrasonic testing — thermal imaging of distribution piping, insulation, and trap stations identifies energy losses that are invisible without infrared technology
- Mechanical fault confirmation — thermographic data corroborates vibration analysis and oil analysis findings on rotating equipment, increasing diagnostic confidence and providing visual evidence that supports corrective action justification for operations management
- Regulatory and insurance compliance — documented thermographic survey programs satisfy NFPA 70B recommendations, NETA MTS requirements, and insurance carrier expectations, protecting the facility from both regulatory exposure and coverage disputes
The cost-effectiveness of thermographic inspection is exceptionally high relative to other predictive maintenance technologies. A single survey can cover hundreds of electrical and mechanical components in a day, and the cost of the survey is typically recovered many times over by the first critical finding — a deteriorating main bus connection, a failing transformer bushing, or an overheated breaker contact — that is corrected before it progresses to an unplanned outage, equipment damage, or fire. Our thermographic inspection program brings Level II and Level III certified thermographers, calibrated instrumentation, quantitative measurement discipline, and clear reporting to deliver that value consistently for your facility.