Introduction and Theory: Figure 1: Liquid Filled Glass Thermometers
Introduction and Theory: Figure 1: Liquid Filled Glass Thermometers
Gas (Vapor Pressure) and Bi-Metal Thermometers: when a vapor is in equilibrium with the
liquid or solid form, or both, of the same substance, it exerts vapor pressure. When the conditions
allow the chemical to exist in two or all three stages. The tendency of a substance to convert into
a gaseous or vapor state is measured by vapor pressure, which rises with temperature. The
boiling point of a liquid is defined as the temperature at which the vapor pressure at its surface
equals the pressure exerted by its surroundings. Bimetal thermometers convert temperature into
mechanical displacement by using two strips of different metals. The different metals, which are
frequently steel and copper or steel and brass, are linked together throughout their length and
expand at different rates when heated. If the strip is heated, it will bend one way, and if it is
cooled, it will bend the other. This movement corresponds to the real temperature and moves a
scale indication along it. The metal strips are generally coiled for compactness and can be
extended for sensitivity. Bimetal thermometers are low-cost, easy-to-use, and long-lasting. They
only show the current temperature on their dial because they are essentially mechanical devices.
They can be accurate to within a tenth of a percent of the complete span. They're commonly
found in locations like food and beverage preparation, process temperature measurement,
wastewater treatment, boiler systems, and other places.
-, T.-S., By, -, & Tec-Science. (2021, May 14). How does a liquid-in-glass thermometer
work? - tec-science. tec. Retrieved September 18, 2021, from https://www.tec-
science.com/thermodynamics/temperature/how-does-a-liquid-in-glass-thermometer-
work/.