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Encyclopedia > Bimetallic

This page concerns the temperature-sensitive mechanical device. For bi-metal electrical devices see thermocouple and Peltier_Seebeck effect. For metals composed of a mixture of two or more metallic elements see alloy.

Contents

Fundamentals

A bi-metallic strip is used to convert a temperature change into mechanical displacement.


The strip consists of two layers, usually iron and copper. The two layers are joined together to form the strip.


Owing to the difference in the constants of expansion of the two materials, a flat strip will bend one way (toward the iron part) if heated, and in the opposite direction if cooled below its normal temperature.


In some applications the bi_metal strip is used in the flat form. In others, it is wrapped into a coil, which gives greater sensitivity in a compact space.


Applications

Thermostats

In regulating thermostats that operate over a wide range of temperatures the bi_metal strip is mechanically fixed and attached to an electrical power source while the other (moving) end carries an electrical contact. In adjustable thermostats another contact is positioned with a regulating knob or lever. The position so set controls the regulated temperature, called the set point.


Some thermostats use a mercury switch connected to both electrical leads. The angle of the entire mechanism is adjustable to control the set point of the thermostat.


Depending upon the application, a higher temperature may open a contact (as in a heater control) or it may close a contact (as in a refrigerator or air conditioner


The electrical contacts may control the power directly (as in a household iron) or indirectly, switching electrical power through a relay or the supply of natural gas or fuel oil through an electrically operated valve. In some natural gas heaters the power may be provided with a thermocouple that is heated by a pilot light (a small, continuously burning flame). In devices without pilot lights for ignition (as in most modern gas clothes dryers and some natural gas heaters and decorative fireplaces) the power for the contacts is provided by reduced household electrical power that operates a relay controlling an electric ignitor, either a resistance heater or an electrically powered spark generating device.


For an illustration of a bi-metal element in a simple thermostat, see the thermostat entry.


Thermometers

A direct indicating dial thermometer (such as a patio thermometer or a meat thermometer) uses a bi-metallic strip wrapped into a coil, as does a common household thermostat. One end of the coil is fixed to the chassis of the device and the other is connected to an indicating needle.






  Results from FactBites:
 
EH.Net Encyclopedia: Bimetallism (1420 words)
Under a typical bimetallic standard coins of gold and silver were produced by the Mint under orders of the sovereign, and they were given exchange values that reflected their intrinsic value.
At the beginning of the nineteenth century most Western economies used bimetallic standards, but by the end of the century the gold standard - that is, a monometallic standard - covered the West and much of the rest of the global economy.
The LMU countries were at the forefront of the promotion of bimetallism, but Britain and Germany were never really on board, and the requisite degree of international co-operation was not forthcoming.
Bimetallism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (642 words)
In economics, bimetallism is a monetary standard in which the value of the monetary unit can be expressed either with a certain amount of gold or with a certain amount of silver: the ratio between the two metals is fixed by law.
Bimetallism and "free silver" were favored by Democrats, populists, and Western states with silver mines, in contrast to the gold standard which was favored by financial interests in the East Coast.
The practical difficulties which in times past had confronted the maintenance of a joint standard, a concurrent circulation of the two metals, led one nation after another to abandon the effort, and to adopt a system of monometallism, with gold as its basis.
  More results at FactBites »

 

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