Screen-printed, pure carbon-black thermocouple fabrication and seebeck coefficients

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Abstract

Thermocouples classically consist of two metals or semiconductor components that are joined at one end, where temperature is measured. Carbon black is a low-cost semiconductor with a Seebeck coefficient that depends on the structure of the carbon particles. Different carbon black screen-printing inks generally exhibit different Seebeck coefficients, and two can therefore be combined to realize a thermocouple. In this work, we used a set of four different commercially available carbon-black screen-printing inks to print all-carbon-black thermocouples. The outputs of these thermocouples were characterized and their Seebeck coefficients determined. We found that the outputs of pure carbon-black thermocouples are reasonably stable, linear, and quantitatively comparable to those of commercially available R-or S-type thermocouples. It is thus possible to fabricate thermocouples by an easily scalable, cost-efficient process that combines two low-cost materials.

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Offenzeller, C., Knoll, M., Jakoby, B., & Hilbers, W. (2019). Screen-printed, pure carbon-black thermocouple fabrication and seebeck coefficients. Sensors (Switzerland), 19(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/s19020403

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