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Temperature Measurement Methods

This document discusses different methods for measuring temperature, including mechanical, electric, and radiation methods. It provides details on common temperature sensors such as liquid-in-glass thermometers, RTDs (resistance temperature detectors), thermistors, and thermocouples. The document explains how each sensor works and its advantages and disadvantages. Radiation-based sensors like pyrometers and infrared thermometers are also overviewed.

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Vijay Raj Punia
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
732 views24 pages

Temperature Measurement Methods

This document discusses different methods for measuring temperature, including mechanical, electric, and radiation methods. It provides details on common temperature sensors such as liquid-in-glass thermometers, RTDs (resistance temperature detectors), thermistors, and thermocouples. The document explains how each sensor works and its advantages and disadvantages. Radiation-based sensors like pyrometers and infrared thermometers are also overviewed.

Uploaded by

Vijay Raj Punia
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Overview of Temperature

Measurement
NEIL VIJAY PUNIA
Temperature Measurement Method
Mechanical or Non-Electric method
 Liquid-in-glass thermometer-Change in pressure
 Constant-volume gas thermometer
 Bimetallic Thermometer
Electric method
 Resistance-Temperature Detectors
 Thermistors
 Thermocouples
Radiation Method
 Total radiation Pyrometer
 Selective Radiation Pyrometer
 Infrared(IR) Pyrometer
What Is Thermometer
 A device to measure temperature.
 A thermometer has two important elements:
• The temperature sensor (e.g. the bulb on a mercury
thermometer) in which some physical change occurs
with temperature
• Some means of converting this physical change into a
value.
Glass Thermometer
 Mercury filled in a glass tube
and a glass bulb at the
bottom.
 As the temperature
increases, the mercury rises
in the glass tube.
 The glass tube is calibrated in
Celsius, Fahrenheit or both.
RTD
How it works:
 Utilizes the fact that
resistance of a metal
changes with temperature.
Make up:
 Traditionally made up of
platinum, nickel, iron or
copper wound around an
insulator.
Temperature range:
 From about -196°C to
660°C.

Thin Film RTD


RTD geometry

 Sheathing: stainless steel or iconel, glass, alumina, quartz.


 Metal sheath can cause contamination at high temperatures and
are best below 250ºC.
 At very high temperatures, quartz and high-purity alumina are
best to prevent contamination.
Resistance Measurement
Several different bridge circuits are used to determine
the resistance. Bridge circuits help improve the
accuracy of the measurements significantly. Bridge
output voltage is a function of the RTD resistance.
Types of RTD

Film thermometers Wire-wound thermometers

Coil elements
RTD Advantages and Disadvantages
Advantages: Disadvantages:
Stable Expensive
Very accurate Current source required
Change in resistance is Small change in
linear resistance
Wide temperature Self heating
operating range(-196°C Less rugged than
to 660OC) thermocouples.
Good stability at high Affected by shock and
temperature vibration
Applications
Applications of RTD's include
Air conditioning and refrigeration servicing
Food Processing
Stoves and grills
Textile production
Plastics processing
Petrochemical processing
Micro electronics
Air, gas and liquid temperature measurement
Exhaust gas temperature measurement
Thermistor
How it works:
 Like the RTD a thermistor
uses the fact that
resistance of a metal
changes with temperature.
Make up:
 Generally made up of
semiconductor materials
Temperature Range:
 About -60°C to 200°C

Thermistor
Thermistor Non-Linearity
Thermistor Advantages and Disadvantages
Advantages: Disadvantages:
Very sensitive (has the Output is a non-linear
largest output change function
from input Limited temperature
temperature) range.
Quick response Require a current source
More accurate than RTD Self heating
and Thermocouples Fragile
No 4-wire bridge is
required as with an
RTD.
Thermocouple
How it works:
 Made up of two different
metals joined at one end to
produce a small voltage at a
given temperature.
Make up:
 Made of up two different
metals.
Temperature Range
 0°C to 750°C

A few Thermocouples
Circuit Diagram
+ 1 2
- 1K 50K
7417

49K Relay
+ +
-
1K
- Vout
Vin + -
+ 4.7μF
Thermocouple 5V 15V
-

+
- 1K 50K

Fan
50K

1K
Thermocouple Advantages and Disadvantages
 Advantages:  Disadvantages:
Self Powered (does not Extremely Low Voltage
require a current or output (mV)
voltage source) Not very stable
Rugged Needs a reference point
Inexpensive
Simple
Choice Between RTDs, Thermocouples,
Thermistors
 Cost – thermocouples are cheapest by far, followed by RTDs
 Accuracy – RTDs or thermistor
 Sensitivity – thermistor
 Speed - thermistor
 Stability at high temperatures – not thermistor
 Size – thermocouples and thermistor can be made quite small
 Temperature range – thermocouples have the highest range, followed
by RTDs
 Ruggedness – thermocouples are best if your system will be taking a lot
of abuse
Pyrometer
 Pyrometer derived from the Greek root pyro, meaning
fire.
 A Pyrometer, is a non-contact instrument that
detects an object's surface temperature by measuring
the temperature of the electromagnetic radiation
(infrared or visible) emitted from the object.
 Idea : Every object whose temperature is above
absolute zero emits radiation.
Disappearing-filament pyrometer
Advantages of Pyrometers
 High temperatures measuremens
 Fast response
 No adverse effects on temperatures and materials
 Measuring moving objects
 Measuring objects which are difficult to access
Infrared Thermometer
 They work by focusing infrared heat onto a sensor that
can convert infrared energy into temperature units
 Detect IR radiation
(λ=0.7 –1000 µm)
 Non-contact
 Wide range (30-4500 °C)
 Accuracy: 1% of reading
Infrared Thermometry
 Infrared thermometers measure the amount of
radiation emitted by an object.
 Peak magnitude is often in the infrared region.
 Surface emissivity must be known. This can add a lot
of error.
 Reflection from other objects can introduce error as
well.
 Surface whose temp you’re measuring must fill the
field of view of your camera.
Benefits of Infrared Thermometer
Can be used for
 Moving objects
 Non-contact
applications where
sensors would affect
results or be difficult to
insert or conditions are
hazardous
 Large distances
 Very high temperatures

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