When a constant current is passed through a thermometer of resistance Rt and a set reference resistor of known value Rs, the voltage across them will undoubtedly be in direct proportion to their resistance values.
The ratio of the two voltages and for that reason of the two resistors, can be measured very accurately using high-precision voltage divider techniques used in the AC bridges with ASL technology. As Rs is well known, Rt could be determined from n=Rt/Rs, where n may be the measured ratio.
The benefits of the AC bridge
The low-frequency AC (alternating current) bridge technology has major advantages over DC (direct current) systems for high-precision measurement of platinum resistance thermometers, two which are:
DC generates small voltages in the thermometer, reference resistor and cables, across every junction where different materials are used, (for instance copper, tin, platinum, palladium, nickel etc.). These voltages add to or subtract from the measured voltages and so are dependent on the various temperature differences at the junctions, hence they are referred to as ?Thermal EMFs?. These variable voltages cause measurement errors and the more accurate DC bridge systems switch the polarity of the existing to attempt to solve the problem, taking between two and four seconds for each reversal. Utilizing the ASL technology, the AC bridges perform this reversal automatically 75 times another, a much more effective solution.
Iron-clad , which are key to the performance of DC systems, suffer from ambient temperature changes plus the ramifications of component ageing. Fundamental to the ASL AC bridges accuracy is its inductive voltage divider ? a passive, precision voltage divider, the performance of which is unaffected by ambient temperature change and by time. DC bridges require very stable and accurate electronics to achieve their performance. Because active circuitry within the AC bridge is secondary to performance, the effects of active component drifts and ageing are therefore minimised. This results in an instrument which will not require regular recalibration to remain within specification.
Note
Info on our resistance thermometry bridges can be found on the WIKA Website.

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