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Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning Michael Mansell Ken Dudeck (Faculty Sponsor)
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Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Mar 17, 2016

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Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning. Michael Mansell Ken Dudeck (Faculty Sponsor). Topics of Discussion. Types of temperature sensors The CK101 LCD Temperature Meter Our circuit design. Types of temperature sensors. RTD (Resistance Temperature Detector) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Michael MansellKen Dudeck (Faculty Sponsor)

Page 2: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Topics of Discussion Types of temperature sensors The CK101 LCD Temperature

Meter Our circuit design

Page 3: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Types of temperature sensors RTD (Resistance Temperature

Detector) Thermistor Thermocouple

Page 4: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

RTD, the basics 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 482°C.Thin Film RTD

Page 5: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

RTD Advantages and Disadvantages

Advantages: Stable Very accurate Change in

resistance is linear

Disadvantages: Expensive Current source

required Small change in

resistance Self heating Less rugged than

thermocouples.

Page 6: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Thermistor, the basics of 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 -45°C - 150°C

Thermistor

Page 7: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Thermistor Advantages and Disadvantages

Advantages: Very sensitive

(has the largest output change from input temperature)

Quick response More accurate

than RTD and Thermocouples

Disadvantages: Output is a non-

linear function Limited

temperature range.

Require a current source

Self heating Fragile

Page 8: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Thermocouple, some more basics 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. Ex: A type J is made up of Iron and Constantan.

Temperature Range Type J: 0°C to 750°C

A few Thermocouples

Page 9: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Thermocouple Advantages and Disadvantages

Advantages: Self Powered

(does not require a current or voltage source)

Rugged Inexpensive Simple

Disadvantages: Extremely Low

Voltage output (mV)

Not very stable Needs a

reference point

Page 10: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Lets Experiment! In lab a RTD, thermistor, and

thermocouple were placed in a beaker of 750mL of water and readings were taken from 19°C to 80°C.

The next two slides show the results.

Page 11: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

The Data (some of it)Temperature Thermocouple RTD Thermistor

(degrees Celsius) (mille-Volts) (ohms) (kilo-ohms)

19 -0.10 108.00 105.6020 -0.10 108.40 99.8021 0.00 108.70 94.2022 0.00 109.00 88.2023 0.00 109.50 83.8024 0.10 110.00 79.7025 0.10 110.40 75.9026 0.10 110.90 73.3027 0.20 111.30 70.0028 0.20 111.50 68.4029 0.30 112.00 63.4030 0.40 112.90 60.5032 0.50 113.20 54.8034 0.70 114.10 49.2036 0.70 114.80 45.50

Page 12: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

A little easier to readThermocouple

-0.50

0.00

0.50

1.00

1.50

2.00

2.50

3.00

3.50

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Temperature (∘C)

Vol

tage

(mV

)

Thermistor

0.00

20.00

40.00

60.00

80.00

100.00

120.00

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Temperature (∘C)

Res

ista

nce

(KΩ

)

RTD

100.00

105.00

110.00

115.00

120.00

125.00

130.00

135.00

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90

Temperature (∘C)

Res

ista

nce

(Ω)

Page 13: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

First test subject (The Kit CK101) Basically the

same idea as our circuit design, but easier?

How it works Why it did not

work

CK101 LCD Temperature Sensor

Page 14: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

How it works and what went wrong Uses transistors

instead of the other discussed sensor types.

Uses the ICL 7106 chip

Problems: Possible Bad chip Capacitors not

soldered in properly. Cold solder joins

leading to bad connections

Page 15: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Our design

It works!

Page 16: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Picture

Page 17: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Another Picture

Page 18: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Circuit Diagram

49K

1K

1K

50K

1K

1K

50K

50K

-Vin

+

+-

+-

+-

+Vout

-

+

-Thermocouple

4.7μF

7417

1 2

5V 15V

Fan

Relay

Page 19: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

Questions or Comments?

Page 20: Temperature Measurement using sensors and signal conditioning

My Sources Omega.com (Info on RTDs and

Thermistors) http://www.omega.com/

United Electric Controls (Thermocouple, RTD, and Thermistor info) http://www.ueonline.com/

Intersil (ICL 7106 Chip reference) http://www.intersil.com/