Transcript Document

Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
A thermistor is a type of resistor used to measure
temperature changes, relying on the change in its resistance
with changing temperature. Thermistor is a combination of
the words thermal and resistor. The Thermistor was invented
by Samuel Ruben in 1930, and has U.S. Patent #2,021,491.
Leads, coated
Glass encased
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation
Surface mount
Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
Thermistors are made of semiconductor materials (metallic
compounds including oxides such as manganese, copper,
cobalt, and nickel, as well as single-crystal semiconductors
silicon and germanium).
Contrast <<--->> Common carbon resistors, made from
carbon powder mixed with a phenolic binder glue.
Leads, coated
Glass encased
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation
Surface mount
Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
Assume a simple linear relationship between resistance and
temperature for the following discussion:
ΔR = k ΔT
where
ΔR = change in resistance
ΔT = change in temperature
k = first-order temperature coefficient of resistance
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermistor
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation
Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
Thermistors can be classified into two types depending
on the sign of k.
If k is positive, the resistance increases with increasing
temperature, and the device is called a positive temperature
coefficient (PTC) thermistor, Posistor.
If k is negative, the resistance decreases with increasing
temperature, and the device is called a negative
temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermistor
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation
Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
Resistors that are not thermistors are
designed to have the smallest possible k,
so that their resistance remains almost
constant over a wide temperature range.
Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thermistor
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation
Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
Thermistor-choice is based
on the nominal resistance
you want at the operating
temperature range, on the
size, and on the time
constant.
Time constants are about 5 10 seconds. (Check this out
with your thermistor).
Source:
http://www.science.uwaterloo.ca/~jddmarti/p352_w2007/Thermistor_50K.pdf
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation
Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
Source:
http://www.science.uwaterloo.ca/~jddmarti/p352_w2007/Thermistor_50K.pdf
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation
Thermistors
THERMal resISTORS
Example Applications:
1. Temperature measurement.
2. Time delay (self heating from large current ‘opens’ the
thermistor so it can be used as a slow switch).
Heating = i2 R where R is the resistance and i is the
current.
3. Surge suppression when a circuit is first energized.
Current needs to flow through the thermistor for awhile
to heat it so that it ‘opens’, and acts again as a switch.
Pat Arnott, ATMS 360 Atmospheric Instrumentation