Tables And Curves For Use In Measuring Temperatures With Thermocouples

- Organization:
- The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 511 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 9, 1919
Abstract
THE thermocouple as a device for the measurement of temperature is rivaled only by the platinum-resistance thermometer. Both instruments are capable of the highest precision, but the thermocouple, on account of its cheapness, ease of construction, and small cross-section, is finding a continually widening field of usefulness for industrial control as well as for laboratory measurements. Formerly, the thermocouple was subject to two disadvantages: errors due to lack of homogeneity of the metal and the labor involved in the interpolation between fixed points on the temperature scale. Former publications from the Geo-physical Laboratory have described the methods' for the selection and testing of thermocouple wire and have presented standard calibration curves2 for platinum-platinrhodiun and copper-constantan couples, so that the most important objections to the thermocouple as a precision thermometer have been removed. The calibration tables published in 1914 covered the range 0-1755° for the platinum-platinrhodium couple and 0-350° for copper-constantan. It has seemed desirable to extend the table for copper-constantan to -200 and also to include a table for the Hoskins thermocouple. Accordingly, in this paper, the new tables are presented, together with a brief explanation of their use; and, finally, certain diagrams and a paragraph on "cold-junction corrections" are given. Standard Calibration Tables.-In Fig. 1, which illustrates how the electromotive force (e.m.f.) of each of the three couples varies with the temperature, the temperatures of one junction are plotted as abscissas and the corresponding thermo-e.m.f.'s as ordinates. The second junction of the couple is supposed to be at 0°; the curves, therefore, pass through
Citation
APA:
(1919) Tables And Curves For Use In Measuring Temperatures With ThermocouplesMLA: Tables And Curves For Use In Measuring Temperatures With Thermocouples. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1919.