Chemistry I Carol Wenk
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Transcript Chemistry I Carol Wenk
Reading a Machine
TAS Summer 2006
Carol Wenk
Email: [email protected]
Bimetallic Switch:
How does it work?
Metals expand when heated
A strip of 2 different metals that are connected
(coil is more sensitive)
Metals will have different rates of expansion
If metal on inside of coil expands more when
heated, coil will unwind
It’s a thermometer!
Converts temperature change to mechanical movement.
Thermostat: How does it work?
Temperature lever attached to center of bimetallic coil.
Mercury tilt switch attached to end of coil.
When mercury contacts wires, a circuit is closed.
(Need to mount level)
Bimetallic strip can
be a mechanical
automatic control
device. Similar
purpose to flyball
governor.
Mercury Use
• Hg barometer: Toricelli 1643
• Hg thermometer: Fahrenheit 1714
• Hollerith tabulating machine &
sorter 1890
Advantages
•Liquid metal (-39 to 357oC)
•Conducts electricity
•Uniform thermal expansion
•Visible
Thermostat: How does it work?
Heat anticipator (resistor):
Based on setting, current travels through resistor.
Generates heat, which warms coil.
Shuts off heat before room heat actually reaches
thermostat.
Variations:
Digital Thermostats
Thermistor:
Electrical resistance changes with temperature.
Converts resistance to temperature.
Programmable thermostats
Thermocouples
2 wires of different metals are joined
Measures change in voltage
Bimetallic Switch: History
Invented by English carpenter & clockmaker
John Harrison in 18th century (1739-1749).
Developed precise marine clocks
(chronometer) to calculate longitude. Bimetallic
strip compensated for temperature changes in
the balance spring.
When receiving Copley Gold Medal, referred to
invention as Harrison’s “new metalline
thermometer”.
Memorial in Westminster Abbey, England in
2006.
Harrison’s Temperature Compensation
Gridiron
Pendulum
H1
H2
H3
Bimetallic Switch: Applications
Bimetallic strip thermometers:
Johann Lambert & David Rittenhouse in
1767 in Philadelphia; James Crichton in
1803 in Scotland.
Meat & candy thermometers.
Uses a helical bimetallic strip to turn
needle, or uses gears like in a watch.
Thermostats: Cornelius
Drebbel (Dutch) in 1660 to
control temperature of an egg
incubator. U-shaped tube filled
with Hg, raised a rod that
controlled the furnace’s flue.
Bimetallic Switch: Applications
Toasters:
1st electric (no controls): Frank Shailor of GE in
1909
Toastmaster pop-up by Charles Strite in 1919
Late 1920s use bimetallic strips
Sunbeam in 1940s improved bimetal
(based on bread, not heating element)
Irons:
1st electric cord: Earl Richardson in 1903 in CA
Temperature control with Ag thermostat: Joseph
Myers of Silex in 1927
Bimetallic strips: American Beauty in 1943 &
Unique thermometer in 1942
Bimetallic Switch: Applications
Automatic Coffeepot: Russell Hobbs in 1952;
bimetallic strip stops device when coffee is
perked.
Waffle irons: Manning-Bowman Twin-O-Matic
with thermostat & thermometer using bimetallic
strips in 1939 by Alan M. Young.
Aneroid barometer (non-mercury): 1st idea by
Leibniz in 1700; Lucien Vidie in 1843.
Hair dryer safety cut-off switch (1st dryers
1925; safety 1970s)
Circuit breakers: strip bends to open circuit;
1904
References
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21.
Howstuffworks.com/home-thermostat.htm
virginia.edu/supplements/thermometers_and_thermostats.pdf; John Wiley & Sons, Section 6.6
Thermometers & Thermostats, 2001.
En.wikipedia.org/wiki/bimetallic_strip; John_Harrison
William J.H. Andrewes, The Quest for Longitude (Cambridge, MA: Collection of Scientific Historical
Instruments, Harvard University, 1996).
Dava Sobel & William J.H. Andrewes, The Illustrated Longitude (New York: Walker and Co., 1995).
www.madehow.com/Volume-7/Hair-Dryer.html; Aneroid-Barometer.html; Toaster.html
www.madehow.com/Volume-4/Mercury.html
www.bookrags.com/sciences/sciencehistory/thermostat-woi.html
Trove Reference & Education: Science in Scotland:
findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_rlg4413/is_SLGG0003/ai_n15607125
www.greatachievements.org/?id=3768
199.249.170.176/europastar/watch_tech/nicolet6.jsp
eo.ucar.edu/skymath/tmp2.html
www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/it/2005/2/2005_2_6.shtml
www.nmm.ac.uk/server/show/conWebDoc.355/setPaginate/No
www.ce.berkeley.edu/Courses/E77/lecturenotes/1intro.pdf
hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/thermo/bimet.html
www.jitterbuzz.com/indirn.html; waftrip.html
www.madehow.com/Volume-6/Clothes-Iron.html
www.columbia.edu/acis/history/census-process.jpg
www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/mastascu/elessonshtml/Sensors/TempThermCpl.html
www4.tsl.uu.se/~Atlas/DCS/DCSIL/therm.html