Electrical Measurment and Instrumentation Mcqs CH 2
Electrical Measurment and Instrumentation Mcqs CH 2
Electrical Measurment and Instrumentation Mcqs CH 2
measurment and
instrumentation
Chapter 2
Mcqs
Thermistor is a transducer. Its temperature coefficient is
A. Negative
B. Positive
C. Zero
D. None of these
ANSWER: A. Negative
A. Inductive transducer
B. Non-inductive transducer
C. Capacitive transducer
D. Resistive transducer
ANSWER: A. Inductive transducer
If at one end, the two wires made of different metals are joined together then a voltage will
get produced between the two wires due to difference of temp between the two ends of
wires. This effect is observed in
A. Thermocouples
B. Thermistors
C. RTD
D. Ultrasonics
ANSWER: A. Thermocouples
a. RTD
b. Thermistor
c. Semiconductor
d. Thermocouple
e. a and b
a. Gold
b. Silver
c. Titanium
d. Aluminum
e. Iron
f. Platinum
The Callendar-Van Dusen equation is used to linearize the temperature curve of which
sensor?
The correct answer is a. RTD (resistance temperature detector). The Callendar-Van Dusen equation is
used to linearize the resistance versus temperature curve of an RTD when the highest accuracy is
needed. It's usually used in calibration labs.
True or false: A thermocouple voltage is generated across the junction of two dissimilar metals.
The correct answer is false. Most people think the voltage is generated at the junction. Not so. The
material of a wire affects the voltage across its ends, so wires of two different materials produce two
different voltages (V1 and V2) for the same temperature difference. Thus, the voltage across the
terminals is VT = V1 – V2. The voltage develops across the wires, not across the junction.
A thermistor.
A platinum resistance thermometer.
Ans thermistor
A Thermocouple
B.
reistance thermometer
C.
mercury in glass thermometer
ans a
Choose an instrument from the following which converts heat energy into electrical
energy? say why?
A. RTD
B. Thermocouple
C. Thermister
Answer: B, Thermocouple
RTD and Thermister convert the change in resistance to electrical energy, of course, the change
in resistance occurs when these devices are subjected to heat. While thermocouple directly
converts heat energy to electrical energy.
What is the name of the cable used to connect a thermocouple to a measuring instrument?
Compensating cable
RTD have positive temperature coefficient & Thermister have negative temperature coefficient
What is mean by +ve and -ve temperature coefficient ?
For + ve temperature coefficient, when the temperature increases the resistance of the
element used for sensing increases.
For - ve temperature coefficient, when the temperature increases the resistance of the
element used for sensing decreases.
Cold junction is the reference junction aways kept at 0degree celsius temperature, to
avoid the effect of ambient temperature (room temperature).
Hot junction is exposed to varying heat for which the temperature measurement should
take. Where the dissimilar metals are joined.
How to identify an RTD and a thermocouple?
Connect a multimeter in resistance mode to the transmitter. If there is reading in ohms
then it is RTD otherwise, it is a thermocouple.
Always thermocouple shows mV reading and RTD gives ohms reading.
1. Thermocouples
Thermocouples are voltage devices that indicate temperature measuring with a change in
voltage. As temperature goes up, the output voltage of the thermocouple rises - not necessarily
linearly.
Often the thermocouple is located inside a metal or ceramic shield that protects it from exposure
to a variety of environments. Metal-sheathed thermocouples also are available with many types
of outer coatings, such as Teflon, for trouble-free use in acids and strong caustic solutions.
Thermocouples measure voltage change and signify temperature.
In general, RTDs are more linear than are thermocouples. They increase in a positive direction,
with resistance going up as temperature rises. On the other hand, the thermistor has an entirely
different type of construction. It is an extremely nonlinear semiconductive device that will
decrease in resistance as temperature rises.
Resistive devices change in resistance as temperature shifts.
Thermocouple
The RTD is a temperature sensing device whose resistance changes with temperature. Typically
built from platinum, though devices made from nickel or copper are not uncommon, RTDs can
take many different shapes like wire wound, thin film. To measure the resistance across an RTD,
apply a constant current, measure the resulting voltage, and determine the RTD resistance.
RTDs exhibit fairly linear resistance to temperature curves over their operating regions, and any
nonlinearity are highly predictable and repeatable. The PT100 RTD evaluation board uses
surface mount RTD to measure temperature. An external 2, 3 or 4-wire PT100 can also be
associated with measure temperature in remote areas. The RTDs are biased using a constant
current source. So as to reduce self-heat due to power dissipation, the current magnitude is
moderately low. The circuit shown in figure is the constant current source uses a reference
voltage, one amplifier, and a PNP transistor.
Thermistors: Similar to the RTD, the thermistor is a temperature sensing device whose
resistance changes with temperature. Thermistors, however, are made from semiconductor
materials. Resistance is determined in the same manner as the RTD, but thermistors exhibit a
highly nonlinear resistance vs. temperature curve. Thus, in the thermistors operating range we
can see a large resistance change for a very small temperature change. This makes for a highly
sensitive device, ideal for set-point applications.
.
An example for a temperature sensor is LM35. The LM35 series are precision integrated-circuit
temperature sensors, whose output voltage is linearly proportional to the Celsius temperature.
The LM35 is operates at -55˚ to +120˚C.
The basic centigrade temperature sensor (+2˚C to +150˚C) is shown in figure below.
Operation of LM35:
The LM35 can be connected easily in the same way as other integrated circuit temperature
sensors. It can be stuck or established to a surface and its temperature will be within
around the range of 0.01˚C of the surface temperature.
This presumes that the ambient air temperature is just about the same as the surface
temperature; if the air temperature were much higher or lower than the surface temperature,
the actual temperature of the LM35 die would be at an intermediate temperature between the
surface temperature and the air temperature.
The temperature sensors have well known applications in
environmental and process control and also in test, measurement and communications. A digital
temperature is a sensor, which provides 9-bit temperature readings. Digital temperature sensors
offer excellent precise accuracy, these are designed to read from 0°C to 70°C and it is possible to
achieve ±0.5°C accuracy. These sensors completely aligned with digital temperature readings in
degree Celsius.
14. Which type of temperature sensors is used as standard in temperature measurements? Why?
A thermocouple is a device which generates an electrical charge when heated. It is often used on
a boiler to indicate that the pilot light is on and hot, so it should be safe to allow gas to pass to the
main burner for heating water, your house, etc. Should the pilot light go out, the thermocouple
will sort of "tell" the boiler to shut off the gas, as it isn't safe to fire up. A thermostat is used as a
switch, which goes on and off at a certain temperature. For example, in a boiler it will tell the
boiler that the water in the circuit is plenty hot enough and that it doesn't need to be heated any
more, in your house it wil tell your central heating that the room is warm enough and doesn't
need heating tell your central heating that the room is warm enough and doesn't need heating any
more and in your car it would say that your engine is too hot and that the radiator valve should
open, and perhaps the cooling fan should turn on.
What are the advantages and disadvantages of thermocouple?
Advantages of Thermocouple
Disadvantages of Thermocouple
A thermocouple generates a voltage which depends on the temperature difference between the two
ends of a pair of special wires. A thermistor is a resistor whose value changes significantly and in a
predictable way with temperature
Advantages of RTD
1.Most stable
2.Most accurate
3.More linear than thermocouple
Disadvantages of RTD
1.Expensive
2.Current source required
3.Low absolute resistance
4.self heating
Advantages of Thermocouple
1.Self powered
2.Simple
3.Rugged
4.Inexpensive
5.Wide variety
6.Wide temperature range
Disadvantages of Thermocouple
1.Non-Linear
2.Low voltage
3.Reference required
4.Least stable
5.Least sensitive
Advantages of thermistor
1.High output
2.Two-wire resistant measurement
Disadvantages of thermistor
1.Non linear
2.Limited temperature range
3.Fragile
4.Current source required
5.Self heating
Thermocouple
Advantages - Passive
Inexpensive
Rugged
Temperature Range
RTD
Disadvantages -
Expensive
Requires excitation
Low resistance as output
Self heating
Thermistors
Advantages- High resistance
High sensitivity