Thermocouples and RTD Tables
Posted by dapj20 on Sep 06, 2014 in temperature
The easiest way to measure temperature is with a glass diode like 1N4148 or a metal Transistor like 2N2222. These have a small temperature range, probably -5 to +120 is possible, but non-linear. A copper coil or any metal wire or even a wirewound resistor can work as temperature sensor but the thermal inertia makes it sluggish. IC semiconductor based sensors like LM335 and AD590 are easy to work with and pretty accurate. In industrial environment many types of Thermocouples, Pt-100 RTD and Optical Infra-Red Temperature measurements are used.
Input Levels for Thermocouples and RTD Pt-100. And the ways it has to be used. Thermocouples are selected on the basis on how they are mounted or fixed, the environment, the temperature range that is measured and finally the price you can afford for a particular application. Sometimes mechanical wear or chemical environments may eat away the sensors, so a cost-effective solution has to be evolved.
One customer wanted a special Pt-PtRh very high temperature sensor for molten aluminum. It was very difficult and costly to even arrive at a solution. So a non-contact infra-red sensor may save lot of time-money and even reduce risk of injury.
For J, K, and T Thermocouple Read "Temperature" + Room Temperature for mV shown applied to equipment, eg....
If Room Temperature is 25 Deg C and mv applied is 10.777 for J Type STC1000 then reading should be 200 + RT = 225 deg C. The mV shown are for Reference Junction at 0 Deg C.
It would be better if you refer links below, The above table i made long ago, then a Scan with OCR later formatting. It could have errors.
Electronic Tables and Charts
Input Levels for Thermocouples and RTD Pt-100. And the ways it has to be used. Thermocouples are selected on the basis on how they are mounted or fixed, the environment, the temperature range that is measured and finally the price you can afford for a particular application. Sometimes mechanical wear or chemical environments may eat away the sensors, so a cost-effective solution has to be evolved.
One customer wanted a special Pt-PtRh very high temperature sensor for molten aluminum. It was very difficult and costly to even arrive at a solution. So a non-contact infra-red sensor may save lot of time-money and even reduce risk of injury.
For J, K, and T Thermocouple Read "Temperature" + Room Temperature for mV shown applied to equipment, eg....
If Room Temperature is 25 Deg C and mv applied is 10.777 for J Type STC1000 then reading should be 200 + RT = 225 deg C. The mV shown are for Reference Junction at 0 Deg C.
It would be better if you refer links below, The above table i made long ago, then a Scan with OCR later formatting. It could have errors.
Electronic Tables and Charts