Facts About Thermometers
What is a Thermometer?
Thermometers measure temperature, by using materials that change
in some way when they are heated or cooled. In a mercury or alcohol
thermometer the liquid expands as it is heated and contracts when
it is cooled, so the length of the liquid column is longer or shorter
depending on the temperature. Modern thermometers are calibrated
in standard temperature units such as Fahrenheit or Celsius.
Electronic Wireless Thermometers
It is now common to measure temperature with electronics or wireless
thermometers. The most common sensor is a thermoresistor (or thermistor).
This device changes its resistance with changes in temperature.
A computer or other circuit measures the resistance and converts
it to a temperature, either to display it or to make decisions about
turning something on or off.
Ear Thermometers
It turns out that the eardrum is an extremely accurate point to
measure body temperature from because it is recessed inside the
head (just like your tongue). The problem with the eardrum is that
it is so fragile. You don't want to be touching the eardrum with
a thermometer.
This makes the detection of the eardrum's temperature a remote sensing
problem. Granted, it is not very remote -- just a centimeter or
so. But it's remote nonetheless! It turns out that the remote sensing
of an object's temperature can be done using its infrared radiation.
This technique is a very good way to detect the temperature of a
person's eardrum.
All of the objects around you are radiating infrared energy right
now. Human beings don't have any sensors that can detect subtle
differences in infrared, but our skin can detect objects radiating
lots of infrared energy. When you warm yourself by standing close
to a fire, the "warmth" is infrared energy that you are
absorbing. The idea behind the temperature sensor in the ear thermometer
is to create a device that is sensitive to very subtle changes in
infrared emission. One common sensor is the thermopile, which can
be accurate to a tenth of a degree. The thermopile sees the eardrum
and measures its infrared emissions. The emission is converted into
a temperature and displayed on an LCD.
Bulb Thermometers
The bulb thermometer is the common glass thermometer you probably
grew up with. The thermometer contains some type of fluid, generally
mercury.
Bulb thermometers rely on the simple principle that a liquid changes
its volume relative to its temperature. Liquids take up less space
when they are cold and more space when they are warm (this same
principal works for gases and is the basis of the hot air balloon).
You probably work with liquids every day, but may not notice that
things like water, milk and cooking oil all take up more or less
space as their temperatures change. In these cases, the change in
volume is fairly small. All bulb thermometers use a fairly large
bulb and a narrow tube to accentuate the change in volume. You can
see this for yourself by making your own bulb thermometer from scratch.
Here is what you'll need:
- A glass jar or bottle with a water-tight lid - The lid should
be the screw-on kind and made from metal or plastic. I used a
48-ounce apple juice jar. The jar needs to be glass so that its
shape does not change when you squeeze it.
- A drill or a hammer and a large nail
- Some silly putty, plumbers putty, caulk or chewing gum
- A drinking straw - 8 or 10 inches (about 23 cm) long, the thinner
the better, preferably clear
- Some food coloring (not required)
To make your thermometer:
- Drill or punch a hole in the lid of your jar. The hole should
be as close to the diameter of the straw as you can get.
- Insert the end of the straw into the hole, and then seal around
the hole with your silly putty both on the inside and the outside
of the lid.
- Fill your jar with cold water. You can do this either by filling
it with water and leaving it in the refrigerator overnight, or
by making some ice water in a pitcher and then pouring the ice
water into your jar (straining the ice out in the process -- all
you want is water in the jar). Add food coloring if you desire
and shake it up.
Put the jar on the table to keep it steady -- you want the jar
filled to the brim with cold water, as full as you can get it
without overflowing.
Put the lid on the jar. When you screw on the cap, a little water
may spill out the sides, and a little water may be visible in
the straw. That's okay.
- Place the jar in your kitchen sink, plug the sink and run hot
water into the sink until the sink is about half full.
Watch the level of the liquid in the straw and a very unusual
thing will happen: You will SEE the water in the jar expanding
right before your eyes! As the water in the jar gets warmer, it
will expand and rise up the straw. This sort of expansion happens
every day, but we don't really notice it because the amount of
expansion is fairly small. Here, because we have routed the expanding
water into a narrow straw, it is much more obvious. We can actually
see it happening.
What you have created is a simple bulb thermometer. And it works
pretty well. If you wanted to you could calibrate it, and it would
tell you the temperature fairly accurately. This particular thermometer
has a few problems, however:
- Because the working fluid is water, it cannot measure temperatures
below 32 degrees F / 0 degrees C (the water would freeze). It
also cannot measure temperatures above 212 degrees F / 100 degrees
C (the water would boil).
- Because the "bulb" (the jar) is so large, it takes
a long time for the thermometer to reach the same temperatures
as the object it is measuring -- perhaps an hour.
- Because the top of the tube is open, the water can evaporate
and pick up dust and debris.
Sealing mercury in a small glass thermometer solves these problems.
The small size of the bulb means that the bulb reaches the temperature
of what it is measuring very quickly, and the tube in such a thermometer
is micro-fine. Mercury also avoids the freezing and boiling problems
associated with water.
How do you calibrate the thermometer? Two common scales are used:
- Fahrenheit scale - Daniel Fahrenheit arbitrarily
decided that the freezing and boiling points of water would be
separated by 180 degrees, and he pegged freezing water at 32 degrees.
So he made a thermometer, stuck it in freezing water and marked
the level of the mercury on the glass as 32 degrees. Then he stuck
the same thermometer in boiling water and marked the level of
the mercury as 212 degrees. He then put 180 evenly spaced marks
between those two points.
- Celsius scale - Anders Celsius arbitrarily
decided that the freezing and boiling points of water would be
separated by 100 degrees, and he pegged the freezing point of
water at 100 degrees. (His scale was later inverted, so the boiling
point of water became 100 degrees and the freezing point became
0 degrees.)
As you can see, the temperature scales we commonly use are completely
arbitrary! You could come up with your own scale if you wanted to.
The freezing and boiling points of water are nice because they are
easily reproduced, but there is nothing to say that you couldn't
use another scale.
More information about infrared thermometers:
How to use infrared thermometers
Where to buy infrared thermometers
Features to look for in infrared thermometers
Uses for infrared thermometers
Infrared thermometer facts