Temperature Sensor
Temperature Sensor
Vout=Vref·Rt(1+R4/R3)/R3=Vref·Rt·11/R3
Vo=0,0141025*Rt
• The resistors value should equal the thermistor's resistance at the mid-
range temperature.
(flexion point ).
RP=RNTC·(B-2TC)/(B+2TC)
G ND
2
Current circuit of resistance
measurement
V+
U3A
4
RE F 2.5
Pt100A LT1014 3 3 1
+ VOUT VIN
1
G ND
t 2
Ui n1 -
11
Ui n2
2
2k5
The graph compare the results of the two methods with constant-
3.5
2.5
1.5
0.5
0
1 3 5 7 9 11 13 15 17 19 21 23 25 27 29 31
The graph compare the results of the two methods with constant-
current drive and curve constant-voltage drive.
RTD measurement circuit
The measurement circuit for Pt100. power
supply voltage (+5V).
AO1
AO2
AO4
AO3
Coefficient Callendar – van Dusen
• The platinum thermometer is one of the most linear and practical
temperature transducers in existence. Yet it is still necessary to
linearise the measured signal, as will appear from the diagram below.
The diagram illustrates the disparity in ohms between the actual
resistance value at a given temperature and the value that would be
obtained by a simple linear calculation for a Pt100 sensor:
• Rt=R0·[1+A·t+B·t2+C·(t-100)·t3]
Methode Callendar – van Dusen
Where:
- R0 la 0°C (the freezing point of water)
- R100 la 100°C (the boiling point of water)
- Rh la 419,53°C a high temperature (e.g. the melting point of
zink, 419.53 °C)
- Rl la -182,96°C a low temperature (e.g. the boiling point of
oxygen, -182.96 °C)
calculus:
α – First the linear parameter α is determined as the normalised slope between 0 and 100 °C:
δ - Callendar has established a better approximation by introducing a term of the second
order, δ, into the function. The calculation of δ is based on the disparity between the
actual temperature, th, and the temperature calculated
β - At negative temperatures The calculation of β is based on the disparity between the actual
temperature, tl, and the temperature that would result from employing only α and δ:
R100 R0 Rth R0
, th
100 R0 R0
Rt R0 R0 t t t
( h 1) h
Rt R0 100 100
t
R0 t t
Rt R0 R0 [t ( 1) ]
100 100
Rtl R0 t t
tl [ ( l 1) l ]
R0 100 100
t t
( l 1) ( l ) 3
100 100
t t t t 3
Rt R0 R0 [t ( 1) ( 1) ( ) ]
100 100 100 100
The coefficient A, B and C
• Rt=R0·[1+A·t+B·t2+100·C·t3 +C·t4]
A
100
B
1002
C
1004
Pt100 coefficient for standard IEC751 and ITS90
α 0,003850 A 3,908·10-3
δ 1,4999 B -5,775·10-7
β 0,10863 C -4,183·10-12
Deviation in ohms between the actual resistance value and the linear interpolation as a
function of the temperature expressed in °C.
Thermocuple
• In electrical engineering and industry, thermocouples are a widely used type of
temperature sensor and can also be used as a means to convert thermal potential
difference into electric potential difference. They are cheap and interchangeable,
have standard connectors, and can measure a wide range of temperatures. The main
limitation is accuracy; System errors of less than one 1 (°C) can be difficult to
achieve. When sensor is used at high temperature decrease the time of exploitation
(sensor’s ageing).
• Thermocouples are based on the principle that when two dissimilar metals are joined
a predictable voltage will be generated that relates to the difference in temperature
between the measuring junction and the reference junction (connection to the
measuring device). The selection of the optimum thermocouple type (metals used in
their construction) is based on application temperature
• The thermoelectric effect is the direct conversion of temperature differences to
electric voltage and vice versa. Thomson and Seebeck effect .
• Thomson Effect. Any current-carrying conductor (except for a superconductor), with
a temperature difference between two points, will either absorb or emit heat,
depending on the material.
• Seebeck Effect. Seebeck discovered that when two dissimilar metals are connected
(junctioned) together, an electric current will flow between them when one metal is
heated with respect to the other.
The effect is that a voltage, the thermoelectric EMF (Electromotive force ), is
created in the presence of a temperature difference between two different metals or
semiconductors. This causes a continuous current in the conductors if they form a
complete loop. The voltage created is of the order of several microvolt per Kelvin
difference.
• (+) Al, Sn, Zn, Cd, Pb, Sb, Bi, Hg, Fe, Cu, Ag, Au, Pt (-)
The ThermoElectric Laws
• L1. The Law of Homogeneous Circuits .
An electric current cannot be sustained in a circuit of a single
homogeneous metal, however varying in section, by the application
of heat alone.
• L2. The Law of Intermediate Metals.
If two dissimilar metals A and B with their junctions at T1 and T2 are
joined to a third metal C at one leg, if C is kept at a uniform
temperature along its entire length, the total EMF in the circuit will be
unaffected.
• L3. The Law of Intermediate Temperatures .
If you have one thermocouple with it's junction at 32°F and some
reference temperature and another thermocouple at the same
reference temperature and the measured temperature. This is
equivalent to a single thermocouple with it's junction at 32°F
and the measured temperature .
Thermocouple
• Clarified by material
– Thermocouple with metallic elements
– Thermocouple with non metallic elements
• Used mode
– Thermocouple in immersion
– Thermocouple on surface
• Time constants
– Thermocouple with low time constant (under 15
seconds)
– Thermocouple with medium time constant (15 … 30
seconds)
– Thermocouple with high time constant(peste 30
seconds)
Thermocouple type
Termocuplu Simbol Polarity T min T max proprieties
R13
R3
200k
LM335 POT
-
V1 R4 Termocuple
15V
+
R14
R5
-
200k
2
POT
V2
LM329B 1M R6
1
Thermocouple Seebeck R4 R6
Type Coefficient (Ù) (Ù)
(ìV/°C)
J 52.3 1050 385
T 42.8 856 315
K 40.8 816 300
S 6.4 128 46.3
JONCŢIUNI SEMICONDUCTOARE
kt
VT
q
Q3 Q4
VBE nVT
VB E
nVT
I I S e
• LT1047A
– output 10mV/˚C+500mV, power supply 2,5…5,5V
Measurement circuit
V+
5...40V 5,5Vmax
V+
R1 I1
1
Vo=t*10+500[mV] I=1uA/gradK
G ND VIN
Vo=10mV/grdK VOUT
3 AD590
Vo=10mV/grdK
LM335 R2
Vo=R*1uA /gradK
POT
LM335 TC1047A R
2
V+ R1
4....20V 4....20V
V+ Tmediu
R1 LM335
1
Vo=10mV/gradC Vo=10mV/gradC
G ND VIN
G ND VIN
Tmin
LM335 3 3
VOUT VOUT
LM335 LM335 LM335
LM335
R1
LM35 LM35
2
2
V-
Temperature Conversion
Formulas
Conversion Formula Example
SCL
Sistem SDA
cu
ATtiny
2313 Traductor Traductor Traductor
T2 T3 ... T8
LM75 LM75 LM75
Infrared temperature sensor
• Infrared (IR) radiation is part of the electromagnetic spectrum, witch includes radio
waves, microwaves, visible light, and ultraviolet light, as well as gamma rays and X-
rays. The IR range falls between the visible portion of the spectrum
and radio waves. IR wavelengths are usually expressed in microns, with the lR
spectrum extending from 0.7 to 1000 microns. Only the 0.7-14 micron band is used
for IR temperature measurement.
U5 R5
200 96k3
-
R3
AD590J 1k
10k R4
Uout
+
1uA/K AD521L
R1
1k 0,1%