01-29-2008 04:57 PM
01-30-2008 12:58 AM
01-30-2008 11:09 AM
01-30-2008 04:07 PM
01-31-2008 06:12 PM
02-01-2008 04:52 AM
02-01-2008 01:25 PM - edited 02-01-2008 01:27 PM
02-02-2008 10:56 AM
Or of course you could use Ohm's law and the Steinhart-Hart equation (or its variants), with published or measured values for your thermistor.
If you have a known series resistance and a known voltage supply, you know the current using Ohm's law.
You can measure the voltage across your thermistor and use Ohm's law to find the resistance of your thermistor once you know the current through it.
Then you can plug the Beta (which is specified at a particular temperature range) into the equation:
where:
R | Thermistor resistance at T (K) |
T | Thermistor temperature (K) |
Ro | Nominal resistance at To (K) |
To | Temperature where Ro is measured |
B | Thermistor material constant (Beta) |