Thermocouples, Temperature Probes

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240-080
THERMOCOUPLE WIRE K-TYPE 1M
Digilent, Inc.
1,109
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1 : $50.02000
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K - Type
-73°C ~ 482°C
3.281' (1m)
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Exposed Lead Wires
TC-K-TYPE
SENSOR TEMP -50~700C CONNECTOR
Olimex LTD
14
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K - Type
-50°C ~ 700°C
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What is a thermocouple?


A thermocouple is a rugged, reliable temperature sensor that converts a temperature difference directly into a measurable millivolt signal using the Seebeck effect. Made from two dissimilar metal wires joined at a sensing junction, thermocouples cover a broad range, from cryogenic temperatures below –200 °C up to noble metal types exceeding 1700 °C. For example, a Type K (nickel-chromium/nickel-alumel) is common in industrial furnaces, extrusion machines, and HVAC systems thanks to its wide range and durability. A Type J (iron-constantan) suits lower temperature ovens or kilns, while Types R and S (platinum-rhodium alloys) are chosen for extreme heat applications like glass production or aerospace engines.

A temperature probe, on the other hand, refers to the packaged form of a temperature sensor. A probe can house a thermocouple, RTD, or even a thermistor, mounted in a protective sheath with insulation and lead wires for practical use. In other words, a thermocouple is a sensing element, while a thermocouple probe is a ready-to-install assembly designed for a specific environment (e.g., food-safe stainless probes for dairy processing or Inconel-sheathed probes for turbines).

Like all sensors, thermocouples can fail. Key failure symptoms include:

Open circuit: No output signal due to a broken wire or corroded junction. Typically shows as an abnormally high or out-of-range reading.
Short circuit: Wires contact each other incorrectly, leading to unstable or inaccurate readings.
Drift: Gradual inaccuracy over time caused by oxidation, contamination, or mechanical stress, often critical in high-temperature industrial processes.
Noise or unstable signals: Can result from poor insulation, electromagnetic interference, or improper grounding.
Sluggish response: A sheath that has degraded or a partially damaged junction can cause delays in capturing real temperature changes.

Compared to RTDs, which excel in precision and stability but are more fragile, thermocouples are preferred where durability, wide temperature range, fast response, and lower cost matter most.