Can You Measure Temperature Without Completing the Circuit with a Thermocouple?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the feasibility of measuring temperature using a thermocouple without completing the circuit. Participants explore the principles of thermocouples, the generation of voltage, and the implications of not connecting the materials at the hot side.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant asserts that a thermocouple generates a voltage difference due to the migration of charge carriers from the hot side to the cold side, questioning whether temperature can still be determined without completing the circuit.
  • Another participant suggests that measuring voltage without drawing current might be possible, but notes that ideal voltmeters do not exist, implying a closed circuit is typically necessary.
  • A third participant mentions devices that can measure static voltages by detecting electric fields, though they express uncertainty about the sensitivity of such devices.
  • One participant raises practical concerns about the reliability and applicability of electric-field-based voltmeters in environments where thermocouples are used.
  • A later reply clarifies that a thermocouple can be made from any two dissimilar metals, not just semiconductors, and reiterates the initial explanation of how thermocouples function.
  • Another participant questions the direction of heat flow relative to current, suggesting that the hot and cold sides should be on opposite sides of the junction.
  • One participant argues that if the p-type and n-type materials are not connected, the potential difference is undefined, as it requires the ability to exchange electrons.
  • They also mention that indirect connections through a conducting medium could involve measuring different temperatures, referencing differential thermocouples as a method to measure multiple temperature differences efficiently.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the ability to measure temperature without completing the circuit, with some supporting the idea and others challenging it. The discussion remains unresolved, with multiple competing perspectives on the principles and practicalities involved.

Contextual Notes

Participants highlight limitations regarding the assumptions about voltage measurement, the need for electron exchange, and the practical application of theoretical concepts in real-world scenarios.

uncanny_man
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I really need someone to tell me I'm wrong and why here or this is going to keep bothering me.

As far as I'm aware, a thermocouple works by heating the same side of two different materials, one p-type and one n-type. Since charge carriers also serve to conduct thermal energy, the charge carriers on the hot side will have a net migration over to the cold side building up a positive charge on the cold side of the p type material and a negative charge on the cold side of the negative terminal: this is a difference in potential (voltage). Generally, thermocouples connect the two materials together at the hot side and connect the cold sides of the materials together through a load, completing a circuit and generating current flow.

That all said, what happens if you do not connect the p and n type materials together on the hot side? Obviously current will not flow, but you should still be generating a difference in potential on the cold sides, right? Couldn't you still figure out the temperature from the voltage generated even without completing the circuit then? Again, please tell me I'm wrong and why.
 
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I think you could, if you could measure the voltage without having to draw any current, but as far as I know, ideal voltmeters are not around...to measure a voltage, you need a little bitty current and hence a closed circuit...but I could be wrong...
 
Typically you're right, but not necessarily. There are devices to measure static voltages by measuring the associated electric field. Not sure what kind of sensitivity they can achieve though...
 
Just as so many quotes emphasize the difference between theory and practice..let's get practical, here..can you use such "electric-field"-based voltmeter in the environment where the thermo-couple is being used? is it reliable? dependable? cheap?

Are you asking a theoretical question one or a practical one?
 
Theoretical, but for a very specific hypothetical application. I'm thinking of making a kind of detector in which sections of a thermoelectric array are functionalized to heat under certain conditions, others are not. In this case, it is essential to maximize temperature change for a small change in heat and for a localized location (meaning I don't wan't non-essential material adding a heat sink effect), and I don't care about the power output since it is just being used for a sensory application.
 
uncanny_man said:
As far as I'm aware, a thermocouple works by heating the same side of two different materials, one p-type and one n-type. Since charge carriers also serve to conduct thermal energy, the charge carriers on the hot side will have a net migration over to the cold side building up a positive charge on the cold side of the p type material and a negative charge on the cold side of the negative terminal: this is a difference in potential (voltage). Generally, thermocouples connect the two materials together at the hot side and connect the cold sides of the materials together through a load, completing a circuit and generating current flow.
Note that a thermocouple need not be made with semiconductors, any two dissimilar metals will do.
 
I'm pretty sure the heat flows the same/opposite direction of the current, so shouldn't hot and cold sides be on the opposite sides of the junction?
 
uncanny_man said:
what happens if you do not connect the p and n type materials together on the hot side? Obviously current will not flow, but you should still be generating a difference in potential on the cold sides, right?

If I understand what you mean then I'd say No, the "potential difference" is even undefined.

There whole measure of the difference in electrical voltage (electron potential) between two systems, requires that they can exchange electrons, at least in principle. Otherwise it's like asking what is the difference in electrical potential between two universes - the measure is undefined.

So if the metals are strictly and fully isolated, then it's not that the difference is 0V, it's more that it's undefined (which means you have no connection, and volt meter will certainly read 0 V)

That said one of course don't need a direct connection between the measuring ends. You can have them indirectly connected by any conducting medium, but then of course you have two temperatures involved, not one so you'd be measureing something else. (One application of this is so called differential thermocoujples, where you connect two thermocouples in series, and by knowing the temp range, you can accurately measure the differential temperature. This is sometimes a way to get many differential temperature readings with less measurements channels, for example you can get 15 temperature differences in the same range using only 16 channels, which would otherwise take 30 channels if you use two sensors per difference).

/Fredrik
 

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