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Application Note: RTD, Thermocouple or Thermistor?Resistance Temperature Detectors (RTD's)An RTD sensing element consists of a wire coil or deposited film of pure metal. The element's resistance increases with temperature in a known and repeatable manner. RTD's exhibit excellent accuracy over a wide temperature range and represent the fastest growing segment among industrial temperature sensors. Their advantages include:
ThermocouplesA thermocouple consists of two wires of dissimilar metals welded together into a junction. At the other end of the signal wires, usually as part of the input instrument, is another junction called the reference junction. Heating the sensing junction generates a thermoelectric potential (emf) proportional to the temperature difference between the two junctions. This millivolt-level emf, when compensated for the known temperature of the reference junction, indicates the temperature at the sensing tip. Published millivolt tables assume the reference junction is at 0°C. Thermocouples are simple and familiar. Designing them into systems however is complicated by the need for special extension wires and reference junction compensation. Thermocouples advantages include:
ThermistorsA thermistor is a resistive device composed of metal oxides formed into a bead and encapsulate in epoxy or glass. A typical thermistor shows a large negative temperature coefficient. Resistance drops dramatically and non-linearly with temperature. Sensitivity is many times that of RTD's but useful temperature range is limited. Some manufacturers offer thermistors with positive coefficients. Linearized models are also available. There are wide variations of performance and price between thermistors from different sources. Typical benefits are: Low sensor cost: Basic thermistors are quite inexpensive. However, models with tighter interchangeability or extended temperature ranges often cost more than RTD's. High sensitivity: A thermistor may change resistance by tens of ohms per degree temperature change, versus a fraction of an ohm for RTD's. Point sensing: A thermistor bead can be made the size of a pin head for small area sensing. Many of the data loggers featured on Microdaq.com use a thermistor. See each logger's specifications for sensor type. Sensor Comparison Chart
Information provided by Minco.com, a supplier of RTD, thermocouple and thermistor temperature sensors.
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