Wednesday 19 March 2014

resistors - Cermet potentiometer temperature coefficients


I'm engineering a system that is temperature-sensitive, between ~-10-30C. I've moved to using cermet potentiometers because of their sub-200PPM/C temperature coefficients.


If I wire such a pot with the extremities at gnd and Vcc assumed to be temperature-invariant, and take the wiper as a Vref, then can I assume that the "lower" and "upper" parts of the pot on either side of the wiper have equal temperature variance and so Vref's temperature variance will be nearly zero?



Answer



It's a reasonable assumption that the tempco will much be better than using it as a rheostat, and your statement should be reliable for some value of "nearly".


A wild guess would be that you can expect 10-20:1 improvement if you draw negligible current from the wiper.



Rather than using GND and Vcc, it's often useful to shunt a cermet pot element with a low tempco resistor.


Of course the best approach is to first minimize the adjustment range, then the effects of pot position, CRV and tempco are minimized, then play with the other factors.


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