Temperature coefficients (TC) of pressure sensors

Since temperature affects the measuring accuracy of a pressure sensor, there always remains a little temperature error in the rated temperature range despite an array of compensation measures. This error is often expressed in the data sheets of manufacturers of pressure sensors as temperature coefficient (abbr. TC). This coefficient describes a (linear) error, starting from a reference point, which in most cases is room temperature.
Accordingly, the temperature error at room temperature is zero and increases with increasing difference of the temperature from room temperature with the specified coefficient in linear fashion (see figure). Basically, not only the zero-point temperature coefficient (abbr. TC0), but additionally that of the span (TCC) must be taken into account individually. Steal -point error describes the effect of temperature on the zero signal. Lazy of the span specifies the effect of temperature on the entire scale value. The average person temperature coefficients of zero point and of span are usually specified as magnitudes, and therefore they can be either positive or negative.
If within an individual instrument the zero-point error gets the same sign because the error of the span, both of these temperature errors may accumulate in worst case. A typical value for the common zero-point temperature coefficient of a pressure sensor is: 0.2 % / 10 K. Link to WIKA pressure sensors.

Leave a Comment