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Introduction

The Temperature Sensor, a measuring instrument, uses various physical properties of a substance to convert the thermal quantity into the physical quantity, including expansion, resistance, capacitance, electromotive force, magnetic properties, frequency, optical characteristics and thermal noise. Many materials and components change with temperature, so there are quite a few materials that can be used as temperature sensors. Here are four temperature sensors in detail.

Temperature Sensors Explained

Catalog

Introduction

Ⅰ Temperature Sensor Types Overview

1.1 What is Thermocouple?

1.2 What is Thermistor Sensor?

1.3 What is Resistance Temperature Detector (RTD)?

1.4 What is IC Sensor?

1.5 Temperature Sensor Cons and Pros

Ⅱ How to Test: Measuring Indexes

Ⅲ FAQ


Ⅰ Temperature Sensor Types Overview

There are many types of temperature sensors, which can be divided into contact type and non-contact type according to the measurement method; thermistor and thermocouple according to the characteristics of sensor materials and electronic components.
The contact temperature sensor needs to maintain thermal contact with the measured medium, so that the two can perform sufficient heat exchange to reach the same temperature. This type of sensor mainly includes resistance type, thermocouple, PN junction temperature sensor and so on. The non-contact temperature sensor does not need to be in contact with the measured medium, but achieves the purpose of temperature measurement through the heat radiation or convection of the measured medium.
Here is a detailed introduction to the commonly used four: Thermocouples, Thermistors, Resistance Temperature Detector (RTD), IC Sensor.

Temp Sensors Resistance-Temperature

Figure 1. Temp Sensors (Resistance Changes with Temperature)

1.1 What is Thermocouple?

Thermocouples are the most commonly used temperature sensors in measurement. Its main advantages are wide temperature range and adaptability to various atmospheric environments, and it is strong, low in price, does not require power supply, and is also the cheapest. The thermocouple consists of two different metal wires connected at one end. When one end of the thermocouple is heated, there is an electric potential difference in the thermocouple circuit, and the measured electric potential difference can be used to calculate the temperature.

metal junctions.

Figure 2. Metal Junctions

The thermocouple sensor has two contacts. The measurement end (sometimes called the hot end) is where the two metals connect. The reference junction (also called the cold end) is connected to the measurement circuit. When there is a temperature difference between two ends, an mV signal proportional to the temperature difference is generated. The mV value increases with increasing temperature. The relationship between mV and temperature is non-linear.
The thermocouple connector can be constructed by connecting the thermal junction to the outer sheath for grounding or ungrounding (insulating from the sheath). A grounded thermocouple responds faster, but the thermocouple will contact the processing voltage. Therefore, it is important to isolate the measurement circuit to prevent the formation of ground loops and to avoid measurement errors.

Thermocouple

Figure 3. Thermocouple for Temperature Measurement

Inside the temperature component, the thermocouple is usually embedded in magnesium oxide (MgO) and a metal sheath, then insert it into the thermowell or protective tube. This helps protect the sensor from environmental pollution. When magnesium oxide is contaminated with water and salt, even thermocouples that are not grounded will eventually be grounded.
As above mentioned, the relationship between voltage and temperature is nonlinear, so it is necessary to make a second measurement for the reference temperature (Tref), and use the test equipment software or hardware to process the voltage-temperature conversion inside the instrument to finally obtain the thermocouple temperature (Tx). Thermocouple is the simplest and most versatile temperature sensor, but its sensitivity is relatively low, which is easy to be affected by environmental interference signals, and the temperature drift of the preamplifier. So it is not suitable for measuring small temperature changes, that is, it is not suitable for high-accurate measurement and application.
In actual use, the thermocouple measuring circuit can measure any temperature except 0°C. The measuring circuit must measure the temperature of the cold junction and restore the temperature to 0°C. This kind of electrical compensation is called cold junction compensation (or reference junction compensation). Most thermocouple measurement circuits do this.
If the application requires a thermocouple instead of a thermistor, a higher-grade thermocouple is better. In addition, their cost difference is small, and high-quality wire can provide higher stability.

🔺Table 1: Thermocouple Types and Application Ranges

Thermocouple Type

Application Range (℃ / ℉)

E

95-900℃ (200-1650℉)

J

95-760℃ (200-1400℉)

K

95-1260℃ (200-2300℉)

N

95-1260℃ (200-2300℉)

R

870-1450℃ (1600-2640℉)

S

980-1450℃ (1800-2640℉)

T

0-350℃ (32-660℉)

 

1.2 What is Thermistor Sensor?

The main component of the thermistor sensor is the thermistor, which absorbs heat radiation around.
Thermistors are made of semiconductor materials, mostly with a negative temperature coefficient, that is, the resistance decreases with increasing temperature. Temperature changes will cause large resistance changes, so it is the most sensitive temperature sensor. However, the linearity of the thermistor is extremely poor and has huge effects with the production process. So the manufacturer cannot give a standardized thermistor curve.
The thermistor is very small and responds quickly to temperature changes. But it needs to use a current source, and its small size also makes it extremely sensitive to self-heating errors.

Thermistor Sensor

Figure 4. Thermistor Sensor

The thermistor measures the absolute temperature on the two lines, with better accuracy, but it is more expensive than a thermocouple, and the measurable temperature range is also smaller than that of a thermocouple. A commonly used thermistor has a resistance value of 5kΩ at 25°C, and a temperature change of 1°C causes a resistance change of 200Ω. Note that the lead resistance of 10Ω only causes a negligible error of 0.05°C. It is very suitable for current control applications that require fast and sensitive temperature measurement. Small size is benefit for applications with space requirements, but care must be taken to prevent self-heating errors.

Resistance-Temperature

Figure 5. Resistance-Temperature

The thermistor also has its own measurement tips. With small size, it can quickly stabilize, and will not cause thermal load. However, it is not strong enough, and large currents can cause self-heating. Since the thermistor is a resistive device, any current source will cause heat on it due to power. Power is equal to the product of current squared and resistance. Therefore, a small current source must be used. If the thermistor is exposed to high heat, it will cause permanent damage.

 

1.3 What is Resistance Temperature Detector (RTD)?

RTD is a precision temperature sensor, made of high-purity conductive metal (such as platinum, copper or nickel) or alloy. Its resistance increases with increasing temperature and decreases with decreasing temperature, similar to a thermistor. RTD is like a thermoelectric converter, converting temperature changes into voltage changes. By passing a constant temperature current through the temperature sensor, an output voltage that increases linearly with temperature can be obtained. The most suitable metal for RTD is a pure metal that remains stable within a given temperature range. The resistance-temperature change relationship is preferably linear. The larger the temperature coefficient (it is defined as the resistance change caused by unit temperature), the better, and it must be able to resist thermal fatigue and respond sensitively to temperature changes. A typical RTD has a protective sleeve and a probe. The protective sleeve is mainly used to protect the RTD from being damaged by the measured medium, which is usually made of stainless steel, carbon steel, inconel or cast iron, and its use temperature can reach 1100°C.

Resistance Temperature Detector (RTD)

Figure 6. Resistance Temperature Detector (RTD)

It is currently the most accurate and stable sensor, and its linearity is better than thermocouples and thermistors. However, RTD is also a temperature sensor with slow response speed and more expensive price. So it is most suitable for applications that have strict requirements on accuracy, but speed and price are not critical.

 

1.4 What is IC Sensor?

IC sensors can work in a temperature range of -55°C to +150°C, and precise one can operate at temperatures up to +200°C. It is commonly used in fitness tracking applications, wearable products, computing systems, data loggers, and automotive applications. The most common integrated IC temperature sensors are analog output devices, digital interface devices, remote temperature sensors, and those integrated ICs with thermostat functions.

IC Sensors (Thermometer)

Figure 7. IC Sensors (Thermometer)

Analog output devices (usually output voltage, but some also output current) are most like passive solutions when they need an ADC to process the output signal. Digital interface devices most often use a two-wire interface (I2C or PMBus) and have a built-in ADC. In addition to including a local temperature sensor, remote temperature sensors also have one or more inputs to monitor the remote diode temperature—they are most often placed in highly integrated digital ICs (for example, processors or field programmable gate arrays FPGA). When reached the temperature threshold, the thermostat can provide a simple alarm.
Here are the details of two common types:
🔺Analog Output Temperature Sensor
The integrated sensor is made using silicon semiconductor integration process, so it is also called a silicon sensor or a monolithic integrated temperature sensor. It is a dedicated IC that integrates a temperature sensor on a chip and can take temperature measurement and then output analog signals. The main features of this sensor are single function (only measuring temperature), small temperature measurement error, low price, fast response speed, long transmission distance, small size, micro power consumption, etc., which are suitable for long-distance temperature measurement, control and measurement. What’s more, non-linear calibration doesn’t required, and the peripheral circuit is simple.

🔺Digital Output Sensor
Digital temperature sensor is the product of microelectronics technology, computer technology and automatic test technology (ATE). The intelligent temperature sensor contains temperature sensor, A/D converter, signal processor, memory (or register) and interface circuit. Some products also come with multiplexers, central controller, random access memory and read-only memory. The characteristic of the intelligent temperature sensor is that it can output temperature data and related temperature control quantities, adapts to various microcontrollers (MCU). It realizes the test function through software on the basis of hardware, and its intelligent harmony also depends the level of software development.

1.5 Temperature Sensor Cons and Pros

🔺Table 2: Advantages and Disadvantages of thermocouples, RTDs, thermistors and IC sensors.

Criteria

Thermocouple

RTD

Thermistor

IC Sensor

Temperature

-250℃ to +750℃

-100℃ to +500℃

-267℃ to +2316℃

-55℃ to +200℃

Accuracy

Best

Depends on calibration

Good

Good

Linearity

Good

Worst

Good

Best

Sensitivity

Less

Best

Worst

Good

Circuity

Complex

Depends on accuracy/power requirements

Complex

Simplest

Power Consumption

High when taking

Low-high

Lowest

 

Ⅱ How to Test: Measuring Indexes

1) Measurement accuracy: 0.01 level
2) Resolution 0.1uV and 0.1mΩ
3) Scan switch parasitic potential: ≤0.4μV
4) Temperature range: Water tank: (room temperature +5~95)°C; Oil tank: (95 ~ 300)°C; Low & constant temperature bath: (-80 ~ 100)°C; High temperature furnace: (300~1200)°C
5) Temperature control stability: better than 0.01℃/10min (oil tank, water tank, low temperature constant temperature tank); 0.2℃/min (tube type verification furnace)
6) Total uncertainty: For thermocouple verification, measurement uncertainty is better than 0.7 ℃, repeatability error <0.25 ℃; For thermistor verification, measurement uncertainty is better than 50 mk, repeatability error <10 mk
7) Working power supply: AC220V±10%, 50Hz, and well protected grounding.
8) High temperature furnace power: about 2kW
9) Constant temperature bath power: about 2kW
10) Power of microcomputer measurement and control system: <500

 

Ⅲ FAQ

1. What is temperature sensor and how it works?
How do temperature sensors work? They are devices to measure temperature readings through electrical signals. The sensor is made up of two metals, which generate electrical voltage or resistance once it notices a change in temperature. ... Temperature is the most common physical measurement type in industrial applications.

 

2. What happens when a temperature sensor goes bad?
If the coolant temperature sensor goes bad it can send a false signal to the computer and throw off the fuel and timing calculations. ... This will cause the computer to think the engine is cold, even when it is not, and as a result will use more fuel than necessary.

 

3. Which temperature sensor is best?
The most well-known are Pt100 (with a resistance of 100 ohms at 0°C) and Pt1000 (with a resistance of 1,000 ohms at 0°C). The Pt1000 offers better accuracy and a larger tolerance to long wire lengths than the Pt100. Compared to thermocouples, resistance sensors offer better accuracy and a more linear response.

 

4. What is the application of temperature sensor?
Within our homes, temperature sensors are used in many electrical appliances, from our refrigerators and freezers to help regulate and maintain cold temperatures as well as within stoves and ovens to ensure that they heat to the required levels for cooking, air confectioners/heaters.

 

5. How do I know if my temperature sensor is bad?
What Signs May Signal Your Coolant Temperature Sensor May Be Failing.
Poor Fuel Economy.
Irregular Temperature Readings.
Black Smoke from Your Exhaust.
Your Engine is Overheating.
Your Check Engine Light is On.

 

6. How important sensors are nowadays?
Intelligent sensor systems are omnipresent in our everyday lives. They provide security, save lives and improve our quality of life. As more and more areas of life are automated and networked, the importance of innovative sensor technologies will also increase in the future.

 

7. What should I consider when choose a temperature sensor?
Several factors must be considered when selecting the type of sensor to be used in a specific application: temperature range, accuracy, response time, stability, linearity, and sensitivity.

 

8. What is the value range of a temperature sensor?
The effective operating range is -50 to 250 °C for glass encapsulated thermistors or 150°C for standard thermistors.

 

9. What are the pros and cons thermocouple?
Advantages and disadvantages of thermocouple
Advantages of thermocouple: Simple working principle, Short response time, Low price, Wide temperature ranges, Rugged construction, Self-powered, Small size.
Disadvantages of thermocouple: Nonlinearity, Accuracy, Interference can cause errors. Old technology, Needs calibration, Corrosion.

 

10. What is difference between PT100 and RTD?
There is no difference a PT100 is a version of a RTD (resistance temperature detector). What is an RTD? A resistance temperature detector, also known as an RTD or resistance thermometer, is a type of temperature sensor. ... A PT100 sensor is the most common type of Resistance Thermometer (RTD).

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