Improving Air Temperature Sensor Accuracy with a Custom Aspirated Housing Unit

Update Item Information
Publication Type Poster
School or College College of Engineering
Department Mechanical Engineering
Author DeFord, Alexis
Contributor Eric Pardyjak; Rob Stoll
Title Improving Air Temperature Sensor Accuracy with a Custom Aspirated Housing Unit
Date 2018
Description Many fields of research require the ability to accurately measure ambient air temperature. This task is complicated due to solar radiation which heats the sensor and causes it to record a higher temperature than is accurate. The traditional way to protect against this kind of interference is to have a radiation shield like the one depicted below, with the sensor housed inside layered shelves of material. However, as the schematic shows, solar radiation can still penetrate the shield and cause significant error in the measurements (Thomas & Smoot, 2013 and Gunawardena, 2018). To better mitigate the solar radiation effect, there needs to be a way to mechanically aspirate the sensor. In other words, a fan is needed to pull outside air over the sensor to allow it to record ambient air temperature accurately. Such aspiration units, used instead of the radiation shield, are available to buy commercially, though they are expensive and may have difficulty integrating with existing hardware and software, as is the case with the LEMS devices. The LEMS are low-cost energy management systems developed at the University of Utah as miniature data loggers (Gunawardena, 2018). They are composed of custom-made circuit boards (PCBs) that have many ports for sensors. This project is focused on developing a custom aspiration unit for use on these LEMS devices.
Type Text
Publisher University of Utah
Subject Low Cost Sensors; Distributed Sensor Network; Aspiration Air; Temperature; Measurement 3D Printing
Language eng
Rights Management (c) Alexis DeFord, Eric Pardyjak, Ph.D., Rob Stoll, Ph.D.
Format Medium application/pdf
ARK ark:/87278/s61g5z21
Setname ir_uw
ID 1547209
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s61g5z21
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