hey guys,
i have one year of digital electronics under my belt, but we never touched up on thermistors.
i wanna design a circuit that will turn on a heating wire at a certain temperature, maybe 35F, and it will turn off around 40. If anyone has some ideas on a circuit help would be great, thanks.
Its all about the sensor. Get hold of one first, and then design the circuit around it. Ideally, you want it to have a resistance of ~10K at your set-point temperature.
Usually, the thermistor is one arm of a four-arm bridge. A comparator senses the voltage across the bridge. The bridge is balanced at the set point temperature.
Positive feed back around the comparator provides a slight amount hysteresis to prevent chatter as the sensor heats or cools through the trip point. The comparator output is used to switch the gate of a power FET to switch the load...
Well you can do it the analogue way with a bridge and op amp like a 741 / 324 etc. as Mike suggests, but as you say you are doing 'digital' I would assume you want to use a micro ?
Many Pic chips have ADC inputs to accept a thermistor that easily converts the temperature / voltage into a digital value so you can the program and control the output as you like.
There are many such circuits/ program codes in this site and on the web.
so i should us a thermistor and a comparator and when it reaches the right resistance it will turn on, then i have a timer, and when the time runs up it will check the system again, to see if it matches resistance again or not, thats really simple, hey thanks alot
Well you can do it the analogue way with a bridge and op amp like a 741 / 324 etc. as Mike suggests, but as you say you are doing 'digital' I would assume you want to use a micro ?
Many Pic chips have ADC inputs to accept a thermistor that easily converts the temperature / voltage into a digital value so you can the program and control the output as you like.
There are many such circuits/ program codes in this site and on the web.
Cool it in a refrigerator, which will be at about 37degF, and measure the resistance there. You will have to tweak the values in the four arm bridge so that the bridge balances near that temperature.
so i should us a thermistor and a comparator and when it reaches the right resistance it will turn on, then i have a timer, and when the time runs up it will check the system again, to see if it matches resistance again or not, thats really simple, hey thanks alot
No timer needed. As the environment that the thermistor is in heats and cools, the heating/cooling load switches on and off. The "timing" is done by the thermal mass of the environment that is being controlled. Think of a house thermostat, or your refrigerator. No timer in those...