File:Evaluation of Some High-Temperature Platinum Resistance Thermometers (IA jresv89n5p349 A1b).pdf
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[edit]Evaluation of Some High-Temperature Platinum Resistance Thermometers ( ) | ||
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Author |
Evans, J.P. |
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Title |
Evaluation of Some High-Temperature Platinum Resistance Thermometers |
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Volume | 89 | |
Publisher |
National Institute of Standards and Technology |
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Description |
Journal of Research of the National Bureau of Standards Subjects: electrical guarding; high temperature; immersion; performance; platinum resistance thermometer; practical temperature scale; self-heating effect; stability. |
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Language | English | |
Publication date |
1984 publication_date QS:P577,+1984-00-00T00:00:00Z/9 |
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Current location |
IA Collections: NISTJournalofResearch; NISTresearchlibrary; fedlink |
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Accession number |
jresv89n5p349_A1b |
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Source | ||
Permission (Reusing this file) |
The Journal of Research of the National Institute of Standards and Technology is a publication of the U.S. Government. The papers are in the public domain and are not subject to copyright in the United States. However, please pay special attention to the individual works to make sure there are no copyright restrictions indicated. Individual works may require securing other permissions from the original copyright holder. |
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Short title | Evaluation of Some High-Temperature Platinum Resistance Thermometers |
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Image title | Two sets of high-temperature platinum resistance thermometers of different design have been tested in the temperature range 0 to 1100 °C. One set was constructed at the National Institute of Metrology, in the People's Republic of China, and the other at the National Bureau of Standards. The results of the tests provide information on long- and short-time thermometer stability, and on other characteristics such as temperature coefficient, immersion, self-heating effect, electrical leakage, and durability. The results also show that the behavior of the two sets is similar enough to allow them to be considered as a single set of thermometers, and that the sets perform as well as, or better than, other sets of thermometers tested earlier. It is expected that this information will aid in the evaluation of the high-temperature platinum resistance thermometer as an interpolating instrument for a practical temperature scale up to the gold point. |
Author | Evans |
Keywords |
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Software used | [[w:|]] |
Conversion program | Adobe Acrobat 9.31 Paper Capture Plug-in |
Encrypted | no |
Page size |
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Version of PDF format | 1.6 |