SBAA275A June 2018 – March 2023 ADS1120 , ADS112C04 , ADS112U04 , ADS1147 , ADS1148 , ADS114S06 , ADS114S06B , ADS114S08 , ADS114S08B , ADS1220 , ADS122C04 , ADS122U04 , ADS1247 , ADS1248 , ADS124S06 , ADS124S08 , ADS125H02 , ADS1260 , ADS1261 , ADS1262 , ADS1263
Start by determining the expected temperature measurement range required for the system, because this will set the range of RTD resistance measurement. As an example, start with a PT100 RTD. The resistance of a PT100 RTD over temperature was shown in Figure 1-1. If the required system temperature measurement range is –200°C to 850°C, this requires the full measurement range of a PT100 RTD. With this temperature range, the RTD would have an equivalent resistance range of 20 Ω to 400 Ω. Use this resistance range to start the design of the measurement system. Determining the temperature range and then the RTD resistance range helps set the excitation current, gain, and the reference resistance in the design.