Seminarreport 150410092207 Conversion Gate01
Seminarreport 150410092207 Conversion Gate01
Seminarreport 150410092207 Conversion Gate01
SEMINAR REPORT
ON
TEMPERATURE MEASURING INSTRUMENT
SUBMITTED BY –
Apart from this, I would also like to thank GOOGLE & WIKIPEDIA,
because I got adequate information for the preparation of my report from
them..
And last, but not the least I would like to thank my friends who helped me
on this seminar.
Submitted by:
AMBRISH RAI
(1102027)
3
7 Pyrometer 15-19
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Introduction:-
Temperature measurement in today’s industrial environment encompasses a wide variety of
needs and applications. To meet this wide array of needs the process controls industry has
developed a large number of sensors and devices to handle this demand. In this experiment you
will have an opportunity to understand the concepts and uses of many of the common
transducers, and actually run an experiment using a selection of these devices. Temperature is a
very critical and widely measured variable for most mechanical engineers. Many processes must
have either a monitored or controlled temperature. This can range from the simple monitoring
of the water temperature of an engine or load device, or as complex as the temperature of a
weld in a laser welding application. More difficult measurements such as the temperature of
smoke stack gas from a power generating station or blast furnace or the exhaust gas of a rocket
may be need to be monitored. Much more common are the temperatures of fluids in processes
or process support applications, or the temperature of solid objects such as metal plates,
bearings and shafts in a piece of machinery.
The history of temperature measurement-
There are a wide variety of temperature measurement probes in use today depending on what
you are trying to measure, how accurately you need to measure it, if you need to use it for
control or just man monitoring, or if you can even touch what you are try ing to monitor.
Temperature measurement can be classified into a few general categories: a) Thermometers b)
Probes c) Non-contact Thermometers are the oldest of the group. The need to measure and
quantify the temperature of something started around 150 A.D. when Galen determined the
‘complexion’ of someone based on four observable quantities. The actual science of
‘thermometry’ did not evolve until the growth of the sciences in the 1500’s The first actual
thermometer was an air-thermoscope described in Natural Magic (1558, 1589). This device was
the fore runner of the current class of glass thermometers. Up to 1841 there were 18 different
temperature scales in use. An instrument maker, Daniel Gabriel Fahrenheit learned to calibrate
thermometers from Ole Romer, a Danish astronomer. Between 1708 and 1724 Fahrenheit
began producing thermometers using Romer’s scale and then modified that to what we know to
day as the Fahrenheit scale. Fahrenheit greatly improved the thermometer by changing the
reservoir to a cylinder and replaced the spirits used in the early devices with mercury. This was
done because it had a nearly linear rate of thermal expansion. His calibration techniques were a
trade secret, but it was known that he used a certain mixture of the melting poi nt of a mixture
of sea salt, ice and water and the armpit temperature of a healthy man as calibration points.
When the scale was adopted by Great Britain the temperature of 212 was defined as the boiling
point of water. This point as well as the melting point of plain ice were used as two known
calibration points. About 1740 Anders Celsius proposed the centigrade scale. It is not clear who
invented the scale, but it divided the range of the melting point of ice (100) to the steam point
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of water (0) into 100 parts, hence ‘centigrade’. Linnaeus inverted the scale so that 0 was the ice
point and 100 was the steam point. In 1948 the name of the centigrade scale was changed to
Celsius. About the time that Fahrenheit was experimenting with his liquid filled devices, Jaspeh
L. Gay-Lussac was working with gas filled tubes. He concluded that at a constant pressure, the
volume of the gas would expand at a particular rate for each degree of temperature rise, that
being 1/267 per degree. In 1874 Victor Regnault obtained better experimental results, showing
this number to be 1/273 and concluded that the pressure would approach zero at 1/273.15
degrees C. This lead to the definition of zero pressure at -273.15 degrees C, or what we now
know as the absolute scale.
Scale
Temperature is a measure of the thermal energy in the body.
Normally measured in degrees [°]using one of the following
scales.
1. Fahrenheit.[°F]
2. Celsius or centigrade. [°C]
3. Kelvin .[°K]
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TYPES OF INSTRUMENT :
• Thermocouples
• Thermistor
• Resistance temperature detector (RTD)
• Pyrometer
• Langmuir probes (for electron temperature of
a plasma)
• Infrared
Coti
Advantages
1) Simplicity in use & low cost.
2) Portable device.
Disadvantages
1) Can not used for automatic recording.
2.Bimetallic Thermometer
In an industry, there is always a need to measure and monitor
temperature of a particular spot, field or locality.
The industrial names given to such temperature sensors are
Temperature Indicators (TI) or Temperature Gauges (TG).
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Construction
This reading will indicate the value of temperature. Bimetallic strips are
available in different forms like helix type, cantilever, spiral, and also flat
type.
Advantages
1) Power source not required
2) Robust, easy to use and cheap.
3) Can be used to 500 °C.
Disadvantages
1) Not very accurate.
2) Limited to applications where manual reading is acceptable.
3) Not suitable for very low temperatures because the expansion of
metals tend to be too similar, so the device becomes a rather
insensitive thermometer
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Pressure Thermometer
1. Liquid Pressure Thermometers.
2. Vapour Pressure Thermometers
RTD Types
RTD types are broadly classified according to the different sensing
elements used.
Platinum, Nickel and Copper are the most commonly used sensing
elements.
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For a given RTD, all the lead-wires should be of the same gauge and the same length, and
should be run in the same conduit
• Advantages
1. Very high accuracy
2. Excellent stability and reproducibility
3. Interchangeability
4. Ability to be matched to close tolerances for temperature difference
measurements.
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• Disadvantages
1. Susceptibility to mechanical damage
2. Need for lead wire resistance compensation
3. Sometimes expensive
Pyrometer
• A pyrometer is a device that is used for the temperature measurement of
an object.
• The device actually tracks and measures the amount of heat that is radiated
from an object.
• The thermal heat radiates from the object to the optical system present
inside the pyrometer.
The optical system makes the thermal radiation into a better focus and
passes it to the detector
• For an object, its light intensity always depends on the temperature of the
object.
1. An eye piece at the left side and an optical lens on the right.
WORKING
1.The radiation from the source is emitted and the optical objective lens
captures it.
3.The observer watches the process through the eye pieceand corrects it in
such a manner that the reference lamp filament has a sharp focus and the
filament is super-imposed on the temperature source image.
4.The observer starts changing the rheostat values and the current in the
reference lamp changes.
5.This in turn, changes its intensity This change in current can be observed
in three different ways.
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At this time, the current that flows in the reference lamp is measured, as its
value is a measure of the temperature of the radiated light in the temperature
source, when calibrated
• Advantages
1. Provides a very high accuracy with +/-5º Celsius.
2. The biggest advantage of this device is that, there is no direct contact
between the pyrometer and the object whose temperature is to be found out.
• Disadvantages
1. As the measurement is based on the light intensity, the device can be used
only in applications with a minimum temperature of 700º Celsius.
2. The device is not useful for obtaining continuous values of temperatures at
small intervals.
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Applications
3. Used to measure temperatures of liquid metals or highly heated materials.
4. Can be used to measure furnace temperatures.
Internet Sites:
(i)www.google.com
(ii)www.wikipedia.org
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(iii)www.nptel.ac.in
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