Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4994446 International Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer 2017 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
It is difficult to accurately measure the absolute value of the surface temperature of a material through ordinary methods such as with a thermocouple or a thermistor. This is due to heat loss along the electrical lead wires of the component, which causes conduction error and can ultimately influence the results. In this paper, we propose a thermistor probe that utilizes a guard heater. The goal of this design is to obtain an accurate measurement of the surface temperature of a material at a higher temperature than the ambient temperature. The probe consists of two thermistors, each with a diameter of 0.43 mm. One thermistor was utilized for the temperature sensor, while the other was used with the guard heater to minimize heat loss, and inserted into a fluorinated ethylene propylene (FEP) tube. The guard heater was placed above a half-exposed thermistor, and operated as both a sensor and a heater in order to minimize the temperature difference between the two thermistors. To evaluate the minimization of heat loss along the thermistor's lead wires in a surface temperature measurement, experiments were conducted with the surface of an aluminum block heated to 35.00 °C in two scenarios. Measurements were taken using a guard-heated thermistor probe with and without guard heating. The experimental results showed that the surface temperature was measured as 34.98 °C in the scenario where guard heating was utilized, and 34.79 °C in the scenario where it was not utilized. Therefore, the results experimentally demonstrated that the guard heater allowed the thermistor probe to provide a more accurate measurement of the surface temperature, regardless of the contact method. In addition, a two-dimensional axisymmetric heat conduction analysis was also conducted. The purpose was to quantitatively evaluate the amount of heat that passes through the lead wires of a thermistor while it is measuring the surface temperature of a heated material. The calculation results confirmed that a guard heater successfully minimized heat loss through the lead wires. The minimized heat loss was −0.016 mW, which was one-sixth of the loss measured in the scenario without guard heating.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Fluid Flow and Transfer Processes
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