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Since RTDs vary the amount of their resistance when they
are heated, they must be connected to a resistive-sensitive circuit like
a Wheatstone bridge to produce a usable signal as a sensor. Fig. 1
shows an example of a two-wire RTD connected to a bridge circuit. The
two terminals in the middle of the bridge can be connected to a digital
voltmeter (DVM) or they can be connected to a controller if the RTD is
used as the temperature sensor for the system. Since the RTD can only
change resistance, the bridge circuit must have an external power supply.
In some applications the RTD must have additional wires connected to
it to provide temperature compensation. Temperature compensation is necessary
in some applications because of the difference in temperature between
the point where the RTD is mounted and the location where the transmitter
or controller is converting the value. When the two-wire RTD is connected
in the Wheatstone bridge circuit as in Fig. 1, it becomes one of
the "legs" of the bridge. In this configuration, the RTD does
not have any means of providing temperature compensation. This configuration
is the most common circuit for the RTD.

Above: Fig. 1 Electrical diagram of a two-wire RTD connected to
a Wheatstone bridge circuit.
The circuit in Fig. 2 shows a three-wire RTD. In this circuit notice
that the third wire for the RTD is connected at the same terminal as
one of the original two leads. This extra lead can be used in a wide
variety of circuits to cancel the effects of unwanted temperatures so
that all changes in resistance to the bridge come from the RTD sensor.
Unwanted temperatures can come from the wire heating slightly due to
current flowing through it, or from temperature changes of the air that
is near the sensor and its wires. The compensation occurs because the
same amount of current will flow in the compensation lead as in the original
lead and the design of the circuit causes the voltage drop across each
set of terminal wires to be the same, which effectively allows them to
cancel each other.

Above: Fig. 2 Diagram of a three-wire RTD connected to a Wheatstone
bridge.
Fig. 3 shows a diagram of a four-wire RTD. In this configuration,
one additional wire is connected to each end of the original two-wire
RTD. These additional wires provide another way to compensate for unwanted
changes in resistance. The two-wire RTD is adequate for the vast majority
of temperature sensors. The three-wire and four-wire RTDs are available
for applications where the RTD must have greater accuracy.

Above: Fig. 3 Electrical diagram of a four-wire RTD. |