Hello,
To thread starter:
I dont see any temperature parameter in any of your equations.
Before the internet we had books upon books, stacks of books, shelves of books, almost all where at least an inch thick hardcover. A lot were data books from manufacturers about their parts lineup.
There were some good articles about temperature characteristics back then. What's his name from Nati9onal Semiconductor (unfortunately deceased now) published graphs of diode characteristics vs temperature. That's explained a lot.
One of the common ideas about diode temperature response is that the voltage drops by 2.2mv per degree C. This of course changes over the entire range so it's just a starting point.
You can do your own little study though using a cardboard box and heat source like a light bulb or heat cone. Gradually raise the temperature inside the box and note teh diode voltage (using a constant current drive). You can log the results and draw conclusions. You may want to do this with several diodes of the same time and maybe different types.
Diodes are or at least were used as 'single point' temperature sensors. For temperature control often you only need to sense one temperature such as 80 degrees. That means you only care about one voltage level and if it goes down you know the temperature went up,and if the voltage goes up you know the temperature went down. Either way you provide feedback to the heater or cooler to adjust the temperature back to the point where the voltage is the same again.
For limit detection, if the voltage drops too low you know the device being monitored is too hot so you can shut the system down.
A lot of this has changed due to the invention of digital temperature sensors. They provide really good measurements of temperature and provide a digital signal well suited for microcontroller applications.
To thread starter:
I dont see any temperature parameter in any of your equations.
Before the internet we had books upon books, stacks of books, shelves of books, almost all where at least an inch thick hardcover. A lot were data books from manufacturers about their parts lineup.
There were some good articles about temperature characteristics back then. What's his name from Nati9onal Semiconductor (unfortunately deceased now) published graphs of diode characteristics vs temperature. That's explained a lot.
One of the common ideas about diode temperature response is that the voltage drops by 2.2mv per degree C. This of course changes over the entire range so it's just a starting point.
You can do your own little study though using a cardboard box and heat source like a light bulb or heat cone. Gradually raise the temperature inside the box and note teh diode voltage (using a constant current drive). You can log the results and draw conclusions. You may want to do this with several diodes of the same time and maybe different types.
Diodes are or at least were used as 'single point' temperature sensors. For temperature control often you only need to sense one temperature such as 80 degrees. That means you only care about one voltage level and if it goes down you know the temperature went up,and if the voltage goes up you know the temperature went down. Either way you provide feedback to the heater or cooler to adjust the temperature back to the point where the voltage is the same again.
For limit detection, if the voltage drops too low you know the device being monitored is too hot so you can shut the system down.
A lot of this has changed due to the invention of digital temperature sensors. They provide really good measurements of temperature and provide a digital signal well suited for microcontroller applications.

