Potentiometers For Thermoelement Work

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Walter White
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
509 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 9, 1919

Abstract

THE measurement of the reading of a thermoelement is the measurement of an electromotive force extraordinarily small compared to those generally used in commercial work. Of the various possible methods of measuring such a quantity, the most advantageous is always a delicate galvanometer. Since a galvanometer measures current, it is necessary to adopt some scheme by which its current reading shall indicate electromotive force. There are two general methods of doing this. One is to use the delicate galvanometer as a "direct reader," that is, to let the electromotive force of the thermoelement furnish the power and produce the current measured. If the resistance is constant the reading will, after a suitable calibration, give the electromotive force of the thermoelement which, by means of a table or of a suitable scale in the galvanometer itself, will FIG. 1.-SIMPLIFIED POTENTIOMETER. POTENTIAL DROP ACROSS THE PART PIN or CIRCUIT OF BULL CELL BALANCES THAT OF THERMOELEMENT TC WHEN GALVANOMETER G READS ZERO. give the temperature. The other method, that of the potentiometer, is to balance the electromotive force of the thermoelement by means of another electromotive force, using the galvanometer to tell when the balance is made. The usual way of getting this other electromotive force is to have a battery, the "bull" cell, send a current through a series of resistances, which 'may in a special case be the resistance of a single wire. The fall of potential along this circuit will then, by Ohm's Law, be proportional to the resistance; the potential difference between any two points, proportional to the resistance between the two points. This is represented in Fig. 1, where M and N are the two points in the circuit AZ of the battery. If M or N, or both, is movable so that the resistance
Citation

APA: Walter White  (1919)  Potentiometers For Thermoelement Work

MLA: Walter White Potentiometers For Thermoelement Work. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1919.

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