Sunday, August 18, 2019
Instrumentation Project :: Papers
 Instrumentation Project       The aim of this experiment was to calibrate a thermistor and having     done this, to estimate my body temperature.       [IMAGE]This is a diagram to show the circuit that we created in order     to complete the aim. The thermistor that I used was a positive     coefficient thermistor, meaning that the resistance increases as the     temperature increases, this then leads to an increase in voltage. This     circuit has created a potential divider. Two resistors in series     divide the voltage across a circuit and form a potential divider. The     output voltage is proportional to the input voltage, which is     determined by the resistance. This is because of the following     equation:       V out = Vs x R1       (R1 + R2)       This can be shown in the following examples, where the voltage supply     is 5V and the fixed resistor (R2) is 100 ohms, R1 varies. In the first     instance, it is 70 Ohms and in the second example R1 is 80 Ohms:       1) V out = 5 x 70 = 5 x 70 = 2.055 2) V out =       70 + 100 170       2) V out = 5 x 80 = 5 x 80 = 2.22       80 + 100 180       As you can see from these examples, the voltage has increased with an     increase in resistance because the fractions were getting larger each     time. The values that I used were realistic ones that appeared during     my experiment. A resistor of 100 Ohms was one of the three that I     chose to use and 70 Ohms was around the resistance of the thermistor     at room temperature.       When performing this experiment, I chose to put the voltmeter across     the thermistor because it would give me an increasing voltage with an     increasing temperature. If I had put the voltmeter across the fixed     resistor, an inverse relationship would have been formed, which would     have made analysis of data and finding my body temperature difficult.     I also chose to use three different resistances on the sub box, which     were 47, 100 and 200 Ohms.  					    
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