Technical College of Engineering Department of Petrochemical Course
Technical College of Engineering Department of Petrochemical Course
Technical College of Engineering Department of Petrochemical Course
Department of Petrochemical
COURSE: process instrument
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EVALUATION
Overall Mark
OBJECTIVE:
(1) to calibrate two thermocouples,
INTRODUCTION:
When two dissimilar materials are brought into contact, a potential
develops as a result of an effect known as the “setback effect ". A
Thermocouple is a very simple temperature sensor operates based on the
setback effect, which results in the generation of a thermoelectric potential
when two dissimilar metal are joined together to a junction. The electric
potential of the material accepting electrons becomes negative at the
interface, while the potential of the material providing the electrons become
positive. Thus an electric field is established by the flow of electrons across
the interface. When this electric field becomes sufficient to balance the
diffusion forces, a state of equilibrium with respect to electron migration is
established. Since the magnitude of the diffusion force is controlled by the
temperature of the thermocouple junction, the electric potential developed at
the junction provides a measure of the temperature.
CALCULATIONS:
Thermomete Voltage Thermometer Voltage
r Temp. (°C) voltmeter Temp. (°C) voltmeter
18 0.3 57 1.8
21 0.4 59 1.9
23 0.5 61 2
26 0.6 64 2.1
28 0.7 66 2.2
31 0.8 69 2.3
33 0.9 71 2.4
DISCUSSION:
Thermocouples are a common type of temperature measurement device
that is often more practical than a thermometer for temperature
assessment. Thermocouples measure temperature in terms of voltage,
however, rather than directly on a temperature scale. In addition, the
response of a particular thermocouple depends on the exact formulation
of the metals used to construct it, meaning two thermocouples will
respond somewhat differently under identical measurement conditions.
As a result, thermocouples need to be calibrated to produce interpretable
measurement information. The calibration curve for a thermocouple is
often constructed by comparing thermocouple output to relatively precise
thermometer data. Then, when a new temperature is measured with the
thermocouple, the voltage is converted to temperature terms by plugging
the observed voltage into the regression equation and solving for
temperature. And in our experiment, we used ice water as a reference.