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OPTIMIZING THE UNCERTAINTY DUE TO THE SELF-HEAT OF PLATINUM RESISTANCE THERMOMETERS IN PRACTICAL USE

Valentin Batagelj, Jovan Bojkovski, Igor Pušnik
  • Abstract:
    Self-heat of platinum resistance thermometers (PRTs) is a well-known phenomenon that occurs when measurement current additionally heats up a PRT sensor. This temperature increase depends on measurement current, PRT design, operating temperature and surrounding medium. Self-heat temperature increase can be corrected with some residual uncertainty, but this applies mainly to calibration of PRTs, while in practical temperature measurements self-heat measurement or estimation is difficult due to poor temperature stability and/or short measurement time that does not allow temperature transient effects to fade away. If not handled properly, self-heat uncertainty can be one of the largest, but often neglected uncertainty contributions in temperature measurement. A study of uncertainty optimization is presented for a measurement system composed of up to twenty PRTs that are connected to the ohmmeter via a scanner and sequentially measured. The optimal measurement procedure is discussed and the uncertainty analysis is given.
  • Keywords:
    Self-heat, PRT, uncertainty
  • DOI:
    _unreg_wc-2003.TC12-023

Event details:

  • IMEKO TC:
  • Event name:
    XVII IMEKO World Congress
  • Title:

    Metrology in the 3rd Millennium

  • Place:
    Dubrovnik, CROATIA
  • Time:
    22 June 2003 - 28 June 2003