Archive for category Insulation Type

Triboelectric Series and its Effect

Triboelectric Series of selected materials

There are many different kinds of thermocouple wire insulations. Is there an ESD concern using these?

 

To understand the ESD threat, one must first understand that all insulators can be an ESD threat, yet electronic circuits cannot function without insulators. Electrons are what “charge” a material and conductors allow the charges to be carried away removing the potential difference, NOT the electrons, but the difference in the number of electrons between the conductors. In other words, conductors let electrons even out so current (electrons) has no reason to flow and risk damage to sensitive parts. Insulators can build up electrons and because they are insulators, they stay there and huge potential differences can build. One source of this build up is caused by mechanical moving of different materials against each other, called “triboelectric” charging.

Triboelectric charging takes place when two materials come together, or rubbed together and then are separated. “Tribo” means to rub. This process of charging is caused when one material loses electrons, thus making it more positive, and the other gains electrons, thus making it more negative.

 

The triboelectric series is a list that ranks materials according to their propensity to gain or lose electrons. Steel is near the middle of the list and these materials do not show strong tendency to behave either way. Note that the propensity of a material to become more positive or more negative after charging has nothing to do with the level of conductivity of the material.

 

These tests are not exact science and are not easy to do, so different tests sometimes yield different results in determining the placement of a material on the triboelectric series. The triboelectric series shown in the table is a product of a merging of several triboelectric series I found on the web.

 

Conclusion and Recommendation

 

The charging that can occur with these materials only happens when they are different and somewhat distant from each other in the series. So materials near the middle of the series will help generate a charge on those either positive or negative, while somewhat uncharged themselves. Also remember, the charging does not happen unless there is some mechanical action, like rubbing, between the two. That is why the attraction between a balloon and your hair gets stronger with rubbing.

 

These materials by themselves are threat unless they are in the presence of others at opposite ends of the series and there is mechanical action between them. So don’t run out and get rid of all the Teflon or Kapton tape. Just know that good ESD practices should be employed when working with these materials. And keep this at opposite ends of the series away from each other. 

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Thermocouple Insulation Type

There are many kinds of insulation used over thermocouple wire. Here are a few of the most popular, and their advantages and disadvantages.

Thermocouples have insulation over the conductors and an outer jacket

Thermocouples have insulation over the conductors and an outer jacket

All thermocouples are made up of two conductors, each of a different metal alloy. These two conductors must remain electrically separate from each other until they reach the ” hot junction” where the two conductors connect together. This junction is where temperature is measured and the voltage (typically less the 50 mV) that junction produces is a function (a nasty mathematical function) of the temperature. It is critically important that the two conductors remain separate from each other back to the measuring instrument, just like any electrical circuit.

This is where the insulation comes into play, and if this were a pair of wires used in a device that only reaches normal room temperatures, most any standard insulation used on wire would be fine. However, these two conductors are typically exposed to temperatures near 300 ºC (572ºF) in many soldering processes, so a much higher temperature insulation must be used.

There are two places the insulation is used: 1) over each of the two conductors, and then 2) a jacket to wrap the two insulated conductors together. The two insulations are often called out as one material “over” another. So if the conductors are insulated by Teflon and the jacket is also Teflon, then the thermocouple wire insulation is called Teflon (jacket) over Teflon. Thermocouple wire can have a different jacket over the conductors, but the two conductors are almost always insulated by the same material, even if not the same colors.

The colors of the insulation have meaning, and of course there are standards for the colors that vary from one country to the next. That will be the subject of another blog. For now, since most solder process profiling equipment uses type “K” thermocouples, the colors according to ANSI Standard ISA-MC96.1-1982, here in the US, are yellow for the positive conductor and red for the negative. The jacket color has meaning as well, where the jacket is made from a material that can be colored. Brown typically refers to a “thermocouple grade” of alloy conductor material, meaning you can use it to make a thermocouple at any point along its length simply by cutting it and welding the two conductors together. If the jacket is yellow (for type “K”), the wire is of an “extension grade” which means it’s only good at room temp for extending the good thermocouple grade wire over long lengths.

Here are some typical insulation types used in most soldering processes:

Natural Teflon shows through the color of the wire insulation inside

Natural Teflon shows through the color of the wire insulation inside

Natural Teflon® (AKA: PFA, TFE, PTFE, T) – All forms of Teflon are about the same. They were produced because of their ability to extrude, form or take a color. Most all have the same basic
characteristics. The natural Teflon jacket is clear and hard to see, but it’s there holding the two conductors together. If this were a larger size wire, the jacket would be brown, to indicate it is real thermocouple grade wire.

Max Temp: 260ºC (500ºF)

Advantages:

 Smooth clean and neat

  • Can be colored for easy ID
  • Easy to strip insulation
  • Can be applied to most any size wire
  • Low cost

 Disadvantages:

  • Some solder process can reach the temperature limit
  • Burned Teflon is said to be bad for you
  • Very low negative (-) on the triboelectric series

 

Kapton insulation over thermocouple wire

Kapton insulation over thermocouple wire

Kapton® (AKA: Polyimide, K) – Natural Kapton is brown or amber colored and is ofter spiral wrapped and fused together as a jack around the two conductors.

Max Temp: 316ºC (600ºF)

Advantages:

  • Smooth clean and neat
  • Can take most an solder process temperature

Disadvantages:

  • Very stiff and likes to tangle
  • Cannot be extruded onto wire smaller then 30 AWG
  • Very difficult to color for identification
  • Costs more then Teflon

 

Fiberglass insulation over thermocouple wire

Fiberglass insulation over thermocouple wire

Fiber Glass (AKA: Glass, or Glass braid, G) – Fiber glass is braided onto the conductors and over all as a jacket. The glass braid is sometimes saturated with a material that helps prevent the braid from fraying. Max Temp: 482ºC (900ºF)

Advantages:

  • No problem taking solder temperatures
  • Very flexible
  • Can be colored for identification
  • Low cost

Disadvantages:

  • Can fray and look bad quickly
  • Glass fibers can break and get into things
  • Harder to strip the insulation
  • Color fades to brown with heating
  • Glass can be damaged from wear or over bending

 

Stainless steel braid over glass insulated thermocouple wire

Stainless steel braid over glass insulated thermocouple wire

Stainless Steel Over-Braid (AKA: SSOB) – Stainless steel, or other fine wire alloys, can be added to most any insulation type. The main purpose is to increase the durability of the insulation and to add an electrical interference shield. In this case the braid was added to glass over glass insulation to make it more durable.
Max Temp: Same as the insulation inside. Adding stainless braid does NOT increase the temperature the inner insulation can withstand.

Advantages:

  • Can be added to most any insulation type
  • Can be used to bundle several thermocouple pairs
  • Adds strength and durability
  • Creates electrical shield when properly grounded

Disadvantages:

  • Makes the thermocouple much stiffer
  • Adds to the cost
  • Does not increase temperature limit
  • Can contact the thermocouple if not dressed at the ends properly
  • Sharp barbs at the ends will find their way into you fingers

 

Conclusion and Recommendation

For most soldering process I use the fiber glass insulation. If you take care not to kink or tight bend them, they will last a good long time. It will take the temperature, even temperatures required for lead-free soldering, no problem.

Teflon may do fine as well, but you run the risk of the insulation getting soft at high temperatures. This is fine as long as you don’t bundle them too tightly. Under pressure, the wires will press through the Teflon insulation and begin to short from one channel to another. Kept apart and treated well they will work fine.

Kapton will last a long time in most solder applications, but I can’t stand they way it holds a shape and wants to coil back up, making it easy to kink. They are limited to no less then 0.010″ diameter (30 AWG ) so they will not work where smaller sizes are needed. They work do well in the baking/food industry.

The stainless over braid makes for a very durable thermocouple. However, it ends up too big for soldering process. These tend to get used mostly in the paint and powder coating industries, where they get rough treatment and a lot of paint powder or spray. You can get thermocouples here from ECD.[poll id="2"]

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