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An ultrasonic air temperature measurement system with self-correction function for humidity

Tsai, W., Chen, H. and Liao, T.
2005
Meas. Sci. Technol. 16 548-555


Tsai, W., Chen, H. and Liao, T., (2005), "An ultrasonic air temperature measurement system with self-correction function for humidity", Meas. Sci. Technol. 16 548-555.
Abstract:
This paper proposes an ultrasonic measurement system for air temperature with high accuracy and instant response. It can measure the average temperature of the environmental air by detecting the changes of the speed of the ultrasound in the air. The changes of speed of sound are computed from combining variations of time-of-flight (TOF) from a binary frequency shift-keyed (BFSK) ultrasonic signal and phase shift from continuous waves [11]. In addition, another proposed technique for the ultrasonic air temperature measurement is the self-correction functionality within a highly humid environment. It utilizes a relative humidity/water vapour sensor and applies the theory of how sound speed changes in a humid environment. The proposed new ultrasonic air temperature measurement has the capability of self-correction for the environment variable of humidity. Especially under the operational environment with high fluctuations of various humidity levels, the proposed system can accurately self-correct the errors on the conventional ultrasonic thermometer caused by the changing density of the vapours in the air. Including the high humidity effect, a proof-of-concept experiment demonstrates that in dry air (relative humidity, RH = 10%) without humidity correction, it is accurate to ¡À0.4 ¡ãC from 0 ¡ãC to 80 ¡ãC, while in highly humid air (relative humidity, RH = 90%) with self-correction functionality, it is accurate to ¡À0.3 ¡ãC from 0 ¡ãC to 80 ¡ãC with 0.05% resolution and temperature changes are instantly reflected within 100 ms.


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Author Information and Other Publications Notes
Tsai, W.
     
Chen, H.
  1. The Indoor Thermal Research of the HCRI-BIPV Smart Window
  2. Two-dimensional air exfiltration and heat transfer through fiberglass insulation I -- numerical model and experimental facility  
Liao, T.
     



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