Introduction
A temperature sensor is a device that gathers data concerning the temperature from a source and converts it to a form that can be understood either by an observer or anther device. It measures the temperature of a medium. The sensors are used for different purposes from the simple home use to extremely accurate and precise scientific use.
The best well known example is mercury-in-glass thermometer. The mercury in the thermometer expands and contracts on the change in temperature. As the volume change is quantified the temperature is measured with a fair degree of accuracy. These temperature sensor are used from home to the university labs for the temperature measurement.
The complex temperatur sensors are computerised for gettig more accurate results . These devices have typically two forms> contact sensors and non contact sensors.
Even human and most animals have biological temperature sensors in their body which works as the same function as the artificial does. It collects data and transfers it into a understandable form. For eg, human sensory nerves sends sensory information from the skin to the brain in the form of electrical impulses.
Types
Types: Temperature Sensors measure the amount of heat that produces from the object. It detects the changes of the temperature either as output of analog or digital. The temperature consists of two basic types of features:
- Contact Temperature Sensor Types – These types of sensors are needed to be in contact with the object or system that is to be measured. They can measure solid, liquid or gas in a wide range.
- Non-contact Temperature Sensor Types – These types of temperature sensor use convection and radiation to measure temperature. They can measure liquid or gaseous state of object that emits radiant energy in the form of infra-red radiation.
These two basic types of sensors can be sub-divided into the following three groups of sensors, Electro-mechanical, Resistive and Electronic. All these are discussed below:
1. Thermostat
This is a type electro-mechanical temperature sensor, which is consists of two different types of metal; for example nickel, copper, tungsten or aluminum. These are bonded together to make a bi-metallic strip.
http://www.electronics-tutorials.ws/io/io_3.html
When this is connected with cold object, the two metals are closed together and current passes through the thermostat. When it gets hot, one metal expands more than the other and the bonded bi-metallic strip bends up (or down) opening the contacts preventing the current from flowing.
Figure: Expansivity values for some metals in units of K*-1 X 0*-5
http://sensorsandtransducers.wordpress.com/2012/02/06/bimetallic-strip/
There are two main types of bi-metallic strips, which change their expansion according to temperature changes of the object. These are “snap-action” and “creep-action”. The “snap-action” types give instantaneous action “ON/OFF” or “OFF/ON” on the electrical contacts at a set temperature point, and the slower “creep-action” types that gradually change their position as the temperature changes.
Snap-action type thermostats are commonly used in our homes for controlling the temperature set point of ovens, irons, immersion hot water tanks and they can be found on walls to control the domestic heating system. But it has large hysteresis range on the opening and closing of electrical contracts. For example, a thermostat set for a nominal 20°C might open at 22°C and close again at 18°C. This leads to undesirable temperature swings which can nullify the use of a thermostat.That’s why commercially available bi-metallic thermostats have temperature adjustment screws, by which it is possible to adjust the temperature at desired level and pre-set hysteresis level.
Creeper types generally consist of a bi-metallic coil or spiral that slowly unwinds or coils-up as the temperature changes. Since,sensitivity depends on the length of the strip, this type of sensor allows for much greater sensitivity.
2. Thermocouple
Thermocouples are the most common temperature measuring device. It consists of two dissimilar metals, joined together at one end.
Working principle
Thermocouple works on the basis of Seebeck effect .If two conductors of different materials are joined at one point, an EMF is created between the open end which is dependent upon the temperature of the junction. As T1 increases, so does V. The EMF also depends on the temperature of the open ends T2. The junction is placed in the process, the other end is in iced water at 0C. This is called the reference junction. The voltage is directly proportional to temperature.
Types of thermocouple
http://www.thomasnet.com/articles/automation-electronics/Thermocouples-Types
Advantage
- It is simple and rugged in construction
- It can measure wide range of temperatures up to 2600°C
- Fast Response
- Inexpensive
- Calibration can be checked easily
Limitations
- It is least stable and least repeatable.
- It requires cold junction compensation for accurate temperature measurement.
- The emf induced verses temperature characteristics is non linear.
- Lowest accuracy.
Application
- Thermocouple is extensively used in steel processing, turbine and diesel engine for temperature measurement
- It is used in gas feed heat appliances such as ovens and water heaters.
- It is used in power production.
- A thermocouple can be used as a vacuum gauge over the range of approximately 0.001 to 1 torr absolute pressure
- Thermoelectric cooling
- Medical equipment and Packaging equipment
3. Thermistor
A thermistor is type of resistor whose resistance varies significantly with the temperature. They are widely used as inrush current limiters, temperature sensors, self-resetting overcurrent protectors and self-regulating protectors.
It is cheap and easily abundant temperature sensors which is easy to use and adaptable also. Circuits with thermistor can have reasonable output voltages- not the millivolt output as thermocouples have. Because of these qualities they are widely used for simple temperature measurements but not for the high one. But in the temperature ranges where they work are widely used.
How Does A Thermistor's Resistance Depend Upon Temperature?
Steinhart-Hart equation gives the reciprocal of absolute temperature as a function of the resistance of a thermistor.
Using the Steinhardt-Hart equation, you can calculate the temperature of the thermistor from the measured resistance.
The Steinhardt-Hart equation is:
1/T = A + B*ln(R) + C*(ln(R))3 R in W, T in oK
The constants, A, B and C can be determined from experimental measurements of resistance, or they can be calculated from tabular data.
How Do You Use A Thermistor?
In this bridge circuit, three resistors are constant, Ra, Rb, and Rc, while the resistive sensor, Rs, varies depending upon some physical variable - like temperature, light level, etc. That's where the thermistor can be used.
The thermistor can be placed anywhere in the bridge with three constant resistors, but different placements can produce different behaviour in the bridge. For example, different placements might cause the output voltage to go in different directions as the temperature changes.
4.Resistance Temperature Detector
RTD stands for Resistance Temperature Detector. RTDs are sometimes referred to generally as resistance thermometers. An RTD is a temperature sensor that measures temperature using the principle of the resistance of a metal changes with temperature.In practice a small electric current transmitted through a piece of a metal which are platinium ,copper or nickel(the rtd elemt or resisitor ) located in the area where temperure is to be measured.The resistance value of the RTD elementis then measured by an instunment.This resistnce value is then correlated to temperaute.They are used in many industrial applications below 600 °C, due to higher accuracy and repeatability.platinium is the most stable resistance-temperature relationship over the largest temperature range and best metal for RTDs because it follows a very linear resistance-temperature relationship and it follows the R vs T relationship in a highly repeatable manner over a wide temperature range and the unique properties of platinum make it the material of choice for temperature standards over the range of -272.5 °C to 961.78 °C, and is used in the sensors that define the International Temperature Standard. Platinum is chosen also because of its chemical inertness
Working principle
RTDs work on a basic correlation between metals and temperature. As the temperature of a metal increases, the metal's resistance to the flow of electricity increases. Similarly, as the temperature of the RTD resistance element increases, the electrical resistance, measured in ohms (Ω), increases. RTD elements are commonly specified according to their resistance in ohms at zero degrees Celsius (0° C). The most common RTD specification is 100 Ω, which means that at 0° C the RTD element should demonstrate 100 Ω of resistance.Most traditional RTD operation is based upon a linear relationship between resistance and temperature, where the resistance increases with temperature.
Figure 1.Signal Conditioning
Ohm's Law: V=IR. This can be re-arranged to I=V/R. This states that the current (I) through a circuit is equal to the voltage across the circuit (V) divided by the resistance in the circuit (R). Since I is inversely proportional to R, then for a fixed V, the current will decrease as the resistance increases. One of the things which increases electrical resistance is the increased motion of the molecules and free electrons of a conductor caused by heating. This is due to their random collisions with the electrons making up the current which tends to interfere with their forward progress. So, it is true that heating of the metal(resistance element) causes the free electrons to move faster, but in random directions. As a result, the net electron current will be diminished due to the increased frequency of random collisions.From the figure below shows that when a resistance element come incontact to a higher temperture where there is a constant current flow through the circuit, the collision or movemnet of the electrons increases and the same way the electrical resistance also increase but the current will decrases at the end side of the resistance element.The change in electrical resistance of the metal when there is a temperature difference at different situation sensed and measured.
Figure 2.Effect of temperature on Resistance and electric change in monocular
Sensitivity
The relative change in resistance (temperature coefficient of resistance) varies only slightly over the useful range of the sensor. The R vs T relationship is defined as the amount of resistance change of the sensor per degree of temperature change. Then estimate of RTD sensitivity can be noted from typical values of ao, the linear fractional change in resistance with temperature. For platinum, this number is typically on the order of 0.004/°C, and for nickel a typical value is 0.005/°C. Thus, with platinum, for example, a change of only 0.4 W would be expected for a 100-W RTD if the temperature is changed by 1°C. Usually, a specification will provide calibration information either as a graph of resistance versus temperature or as a table of values from which the sensitivity can be determined. For the same materials, however, this number is relatively constant because it is a function of resistivity.
References
The Michigan Chemical Process Dynamics&Control, 2006, https://controls.engin.umich.edu/wiki/index.php/TemperatureSensors
Thomasnet, Types of Thermocouples, 2014, http://www.thomasnet.com/articles/automation-electronics/Thermocouples-Types
Wayne Storr, Basic Electronics Tutorials, http://www.electronics-tutorials.ws/io/io_3.html
Web material, Temperature Sensor- The Thermistor, http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/mastascu/elessonshtml/Sensors/TempR.html
http://zone.ni.com/devzone/cda/ph/p/id/208#toc3
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