Difference between revisions of "Temperature sensors"

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(Thermocouples)
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===Thermocouples===
 
===Thermocouples===
 
[[Image: thermocouple.jpg| thumb| 300px|right|Diagram of a Thermocouple]]
 
[[Image: thermocouple.jpg| thumb| 300px|right|Diagram of a Thermocouple]]
Thermocouples are based on the Seebeck effect: two dissimilar metals bearing different temperatures, joint together at at least two different points (a reference and a measuring point) will produce electromotive force proportional to the temperature. Different metal-pairs produce different outputs (i.e., temperature ranges). Thermocouples are not as accurate as thermistors or RTDs but can take readings of very high temperatures ranges over 2000°C). They are used, for instance, in High Temperature Probes attached to ROVs exploring hydrothermal vents.
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Thermocouples are based on the Seebeck effect: two dissimilar metals bearing different temperatures, joint together at at least two different points (a reference and a measuring point) will produce electromotive force proportional to the temperature. Different metal-pairs produce different outputs (i.e., temperature ranges). Thermocouples are not as accurate as thermistors or RTDs but can take readings of very high temperatures ranges over 2000°C). They are used, for instance, in High Temperature Probes attached to ROVs when exploring hydrothermal vents.
 
<ref>http://www.picotech.com/applications/thermocouple.html</ref>
 
<ref>http://www.picotech.com/applications/thermocouple.html</ref>
 
<ref>http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/mastascu/elessonshtml/Sensors/TempThermCpl.html</ref>
 
<ref>http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/mastascu/elessonshtml/Sensors/TempThermCpl.html</ref>

Revision as of 09:22, 16 July 2012

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See also: Instruments and sensors to measure environmental parameters


Introduction

Temperature Definition

Temperature is a difficult concept to define. Ordinarily, temperature is a qualitative measure for classifying how matter appears to be hot or cold. More specifically, matter is made up of moving particles (molecules), each molecule has its own motion speed, the kinetic energy. Temperature is a physical parameter that describes the average kinetic energy of molecules, it is not a measure of energy itself, but it is proportional to the average kinetic energy of molecules. That means that the hotter molecules are, the more they move and the higher is the temperature. By contrast, when molecules do not move at all, i.e., their kinetic energy is zero, so the temperature is 0ºK (absolute zero, -273.15ºC) [1]

Sensors

Type Thermometric Variable
liquid in glass volume
constant volume gas pressure
bimetallic strip coil pitch
electric resistor resistance
thermocouple voltage
Different types of thermometers and respective

thermometric variables