Pirani gauge
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The Pirani gauge is a robust
thermal conductivity The thermal conductivity of a material is a measure of its ability to conduct heat. It is commonly denoted by k, \lambda, or \kappa. Heat transfer occurs at a lower rate in materials of low thermal conductivity than in materials of high thermal ...
gauge used for the measurement of the
pressures Pressure (symbol: ''p'' or ''P'') is the force applied perpendicular to the surface of an object per unit area over which that force is distributed. Gauge pressure (also spelled ''gage'' pressure)The preferred spelling varies by country and e ...
in vacuum systems. It was invented in 1906 by
Marcello Pirani Marcello Stefano Pirani (July 1, 1880 – January 11, 1968) was a German physicist known for his invention of the Pirani vacuum gauge, a vacuum gauge based on the principle of heat loss measurement. Throughout his career, he worked on advancing l ...
. Marcello Stefano Pirani was a German physicist working for Siemens & Halske which was involved in the vacuum lamp industry. In 1905 their product was tantalum lamps which required a high vacuum environment for the filaments. The gauges that Pirani was using in the production environment were some fifty McLeod gauges, each filled with 2 kg of mercury in glass tubes. Pirani was aware of the gas thermal conductivity investigations of Kundt and Warburg (1875) published thirty years earlier and the work of Marian Smoluchowski (1898). In 1906 he described his "directly indicating vacuum gauge" that used a heated wire to measure vacuum by monitoring the heat transfer from the wire by the vacuum environment.


Structure

The Pirani gauge consists of a metal sensor wire (usually
gold Gold is a chemical element with the symbol Au (from la, aurum) and atomic number 79. This makes it one of the higher atomic number elements that occur naturally. It is a bright, slightly orange-yellow, dense, soft, malleable, and ductile me ...
plated
tungsten Tungsten, or wolfram, is a chemical element with the symbol W and atomic number 74. Tungsten is a rare metal found naturally on Earth almost exclusively as compounds with other elements. It was identified as a new element in 1781 and first isol ...
or
platinum Platinum is a chemical element with the symbol Pt and atomic number 78. It is a dense, malleable, ductile, highly unreactive, precious, silverish-white transition metal. Its name originates from Spanish , a diminutive of "silver". Pla ...
) suspended in a tube which is connected to the system whose vacuum is to be measured. The wire is usually coiled to make the gauge more compact. The connection is usually made either by a ground glass joint or a
flange A flange is a protruded ridge, lip or rim, either external or internal, that serves to increase strength (as the flange of an iron beam such as an I-beam or a T-beam); for easy attachment/transfer of contact force with another object (as the f ...
d metal connector, sealed with an
o-ring An O-ring, also known as a packing or a toric joint, is a mechanical gasket in the shape of a torus; it is a loop of elastomer with a round cross-section, designed to be seated in a groove and compressed during assembly between two or more par ...
. The sensor wire is connected to an electrical circuit from which, after calibration, a pressure reading may be taken.


Mode of operation

In order to understand the technology, consider that in a gas filled system there are four ways that a heated wire transfers heat to its surroundings. # Gas conduction at high pressure E\propto dT/dr (r representing the distance from the heated wire) # Gas transport at low pressure E \propto P(T_1-T_0)/\surd T_0 # Thermal radiation E \propto (T_1^4 - T_0^4) # End losses through the support structures A heated metal wire (sensor wire, or simply sensor) suspended in a gas will lose heat to the gas as its molecules collide with the wire and remove heat. If the gas pressure is reduced, the number of molecules present will fall proportionately and the wire will lose heat more slowly. Measuring the heat loss is an indirect indication of pressure. There are three possible schemes that can be done. # Keep the bridge voltage constant and measure the change in resistance as a function of pressure # Keep the current constant and measure the change in resistance as a function of pressure # Keep the temperature of the sensor wire constant and measure the voltage as a function of pressure Note that keeping the temperature constant implies that the end losses(4.) and the thermal radiation losses (3.) are constant. The electrical resistance of a wire varies with its temperature, so the resistance indicates the temperature of wire. In many systems, the wire is maintained at a constant resistance ''R'' by controlling the current ''I'' through the wire. The resistance can be set using a bridge circuit. The current required to achieve this balance is therefore a measure of the vacuum. The gauge may be used for pressures between 0.5
Torr The torr (symbol: Torr) is a unit of pressure based on an absolute scale, defined as exactly of a standard atmosphere (). Thus one torr is exactly (≈ ). Historically, one torr was intended to be the same as one " millimeter of merc ...
to 1×10−4 Torr. Below 5×10−4 Torr, a Pirani gauge has only one significant digit of resolution. The thermal conductivity and heat capacity of the gas affects the readout from the meter, and therefore the apparatus may need calibrating before accurate readings are obtainable. For lower pressure measurement, the thermal conductivity of the gas becomes increasingly smaller and more difficult to measure accurately, and other instruments such as a
Penning gauge Pressure measurement is the measurement of an applied force by a fluid (liquid or gas) on a surface. Pressure is typically measured in units of force per unit of surface area. Many techniques have been developed for the measurement of pressure ...
or Bayard–Alpert gauge are used instead.


Pulsed Pirani gauge

A special form of the Pirani gauge is the pulsed Pirani vacuum gauge where the sensor wire is not operated at a constant temperature, but is cyclically heated up to a certain temperature threshold by an increasing voltage ramp. When the threshold is reached, the heating voltage is switched off and the sensor cools down again. The required heat-up time is used as a measure of pressure. For adequately low pressure, the following first-order dynamic thermal response model relating supplied heating power P_ and sensor temperature ''T''(''t'') applies:, als
description
/ref> :P_ = C_1 \lambda_(T(t) - T_a) + C_2\lambda_(T(t) - T_a) + A_ \epsilon \sigma(T(t)^4 - T^4_a) + c_m_ \frac , where c_ and \epsilon are specific heat and emissivity of the sensor wire (material properties), A_ and m_ are surface area and mass of the sensor wire, and C_1 and C_2 are constants determined for each sensor in calibration.


Advantages and disadvantages of the pulsed gauge

;Advantages *Significantly better resolution in the range above 75 Torr. *The power consumption is drastically reduced compared to continuously operated Pirani gauges. *The gauge's thermal influence on the real measurement is lowered considerably due to the low temperature threshold of 80 °C and the ramp heating in pulsed mode. *The pulsed mode can be efficiently implemented using modern microprocessors. ;Disadvantages *Increased calibration effort *Longer heat-up phase


Alternative

An alternative to the Pirani gauge is the thermocouple gauge, which works on the same principle of detecting thermal conductivity of the gas by a change in temperature. In the thermocouple gauge, the temperature is sensed by a
thermocouple A thermocouple, also known as a "thermoelectrical thermometer", is an electrical device consisting of two dissimilar electrical conductors forming an electrical junction. A thermocouple produces a temperature-dependent voltage as a result of th ...
rather than by the change in resistance of the heated wire.


References


External links

* http://homepages.thm.de/~hg8831/vakuumlabor/litera.htm * * {{Citation , title=Gepulstes Pirani-Vakuummeter: Berechnung von Aufheizung und Abkühlung , first1=W. , last1=Jitschin , first2=S. , last2=Ludwig , journal=Vakuum in Forschung und Praxis , volume=16 , pages=297–301 , year=2004 , language=de , doi= 10.1002/vipr.200400235 Vacuum gauges Pressure gauges