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Thermocouples (cont’d) and Variable Resistors (Thermistors) 23 Feb 2000 Introduction to Temperature Sensors
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Kirchoff’s Current Law Convention +_+_ +_+_ Using – + = +, we have +V b - IR = 0 or V b = IR Using + – = +, we have - V b + IR = 0 or - V b = - IR or V b = IR Same Result! Just be consistent. clockwise current flow VbVb IR
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Language of Thermocouples zTemperature Range y-270 o C to 2320 o C depends on the type of the thermocouple zPassive yDoes not require external power source zNon-intrusive yDoes not affect the system much zLinearity yIn general, it is a nonlinear function of temperature zSensitivity yFrom 0.011 mV/ o C for type R to 0.076 mV/ o C for type E
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Millivolt Output of Common Thermocouples (Reference Junction at 0 o C) K T J E R S
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Characteristics of Standard Thermocouples
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Common Sheathed Thermocouple Probe Place the wires and junction and ceramic insulation inside a stainless steel or inconel sheath to protect the thermocouple wires from damage or chemical contamination.
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Thermopile When n thermocouples are connected in series in a device called a thermopile Which increases the sensitivity of the system, however, it provides a method to average several thermocouples which are distributed in a spatial region. T1T2
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Example: A type R thermocouple with an ice reference gives a voltage reading of 2.415 mV. What is its temperature? Thermoelectric voltage in mV 2.415
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Example: A type R thermocouple with an ice reference gives a voltage reading of 2.415 mV. What would it read with a 30 °C reference? Thermoelectric voltage in mV V = 2.415 mV - 0.171 mV = 2.244 mV
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Example: A type R thermocouple with 30 °C reference gives a voltage reading of 2.244 mV. What is its temperature? Thermoelectric voltage in mV 0.010 mV 2.244 0.008 mV NO!
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Thermoelectric voltage in mV 2.244 + 0.171 = 2.415 Example: A type R thermocouple with 30 °C reference gives a voltage reading of 2.244 mV. What is its temperature? Correct the voltage FIRST! (30 o voltage)
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Thermistors - work by changing resistivity, change L and A (strain gauge) change (thermistor)
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Thermistors zCharacteristics yResistive Device, active, non-linear yLess accurate than TCs and RTDs y-100 to 300 o C zApplications yAutomobile engine water temperature yVCR overheating controller yElectronic circuits temperature dependency compensator
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Thermistor Types zRods zChips zFlakes zBeads ya) a bare bead yb) a glass-encapsulated bead yc) an assembly with extension wires
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Thermistors zNon-linear zSmall Range:-100 to +300 o C zSensitivity High coefficient of resistivity: 4 to 6% per o C or greater!
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Thermistor Example: Our Lab#6 zResistance = 34.17 k at 22 o C zChange Temperature by 1 to 23 o C zResistance is now 32.71K a difference of y1.46 k or 1460 yChange of 4.2% from the original reading zDoes this sound readable?
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Thermistors zConversion Equations: yT o is typically 25 o C R o ranges from 50 to 2 M The Steinhart-Hart equation:
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Measuring the Resistance Voltage Divider Circuit Simple to build Find the output voltage given the temperature: xSolve for the voltage divider for R T xLook up the temperature for a given resistance VsVs R1R1 RTRT V out
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Basic Thermistors zVoltage Divider Circuit zThe range: VsVs R1R1 RTRT V out
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Thermistor’s Linearized zLinearizing with more hardware: T2T2 R2R2 V out + - VsVs R1R1 T1T1 zYou will do this this week in lab!
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