SBAA274A September 2018 – March 2023 ADS1118 , ADS1119 , ADS1120 , ADS112C04 , ADS112U04 , ADS1146 , ADS1147 , ADS1148 , ADS114S06 , ADS114S06B , ADS114S08 , ADS114S08B , ADS1219 , ADS1220 , ADS122C04 , ADS122U04 , ADS1246 , ADS1247 , ADS1248 , ADS124S06 , ADS124S08 , ADS125H02 , ADS1260 , ADS1261 , ADS1262 , ADS1263
Information in the following applications sections is not part of the TI component specification, and TI does not warrant its accuracy or completeness. TI’s customers are responsible for determining suitability of components for their purposes. Customers should validate and test their design implementation to confirm system functionality.
The following sections describe thermocouple circuit topologies with delta-sigma ADCs. Because thermocouple measurements are primarily simple voltage measurements, these circuit examples focus mainly on different circuit topologies for biasing the thermocouple and burn-out detection. The Design Notes section may be used to guide the design with the following system topologies. For each topology, determine the PGA setting based on the thermocouple operating range, consider the necessary biasing and PGA input range, and determine the cold-junction compensation. Burn-out detection is also described with the following system topologies. Cold-junction measurements are discussed at the end of the application note.
Conversion results are shown with a generic 16-bit bipolar ADC, using the positive full-scale range of the device. Conversions with 24-bit ADCs are similar in calculation. Results are shown as functions of the reference voltage and gain of the PGA. Conversion to temperature depends on the linearity and error of the individual thermocouple sensor, and the cold-junction compensation.
As mentioned in previous sections, conversion tables to determine thermocouple temperature from the thermoelectric voltage is found at the NIST web site at http://srdata.nist.gov/its90/menu/menu.html.