Abstract

The effect of exposure up to 1500 °C on emf values of type C (95 % tungsten 5 % rhenium vs. 74 % tungsten 26 % rhenium) thermocouples were evaluated. Three thermocouples consisting of thermocouple wires of 0.5 mm diameter, twin-bore beryllia tubes, and tantalum sheaths were prepared. After three type C thermocouples were calibrated in the range from 0 °C to 1550 °C, which confirmed insignificant difference among them, the drifts of two among them were measured at the palladium–carbon (Pd–C) eutectic point (1492 °C). They indicated a similar tendency, where the emf of thermocouples increased rapidly within the first 30 h, and after that, decreased gradually. To investigate the mechanism of the drift, the inhomogeneities of thermocouples were examined at 160 °C using a water heat-pipe furnace during the drift measurements at the Pd–C eutectic point. It was found that the increase of emf within the first 30 h exposure at around 1500 °C was caused by the emf change due to inhomogeneity above 700 °C, and after that, the decrease of emf was caused by that around 1400 °C.

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