Convert RTD resistance and temperature with proven platinum coefficients and presets quickly. Account for wiring leads, report sensitivity, and export results for calibration teams.
| Sensor | R0 (ohms) | Temperature (C) | Computed Resistance (ohms) | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pt100 | 100 | 0 | 100.000 | Reference point check |
| Pt100 | 100 | 100 | 138.505 | Boiling-water calibration (approx.) |
| Pt1000 | 1000 | 25 | 1097.346 | Room-temperature sensing |
| Pt100 | 100 | -50 | 80.306 | Cold-chain monitoring |
Platinum RTDs are commonly modeled using the Callendar-Van Dusen relationship, referenced to the resistance at 0C (R0). The coefficients A, B, and C define the curve shape for a given standard.
To compute temperature from resistance, the calculator uses an analytic inversion for the t >= 0C region when possible, and otherwise applies a Newton-Raphson iteration on the full equation.
Platinum resistance temperature devices deliver repeatable measurements because platinum is stable and its resistance changes predictably. A Pt100 is 100 ohms at 0C, while a Pt1000 is 1000 ohms. Higher nominal resistance often improves resolution on long cable runs.
Industry conversions typically use the Callendar-Van Dusen model with coefficients A, B, and C. For temperatures at or above 0C, the equation is quadratic, which enables fast inversion. Below 0C, the cubic correction term improves fit for cold-chain, environmental chambers, and cryogenic test ranges down to about -200C.
Two-wire installations add lead resistance twice, pushing computed temperature higher than reality. Three-wire circuits cancel one lead if the wires match closely, which is common in industrial transmitters. Four-wire sensing separates current and voltage paths and is preferred for calibration benches and long, high-accuracy runs.
A key metric is dR/dT, the resistance change per degree. Near 0C, a Pt100 changes by about 0.385 ohms per C for the common alpha value. If a meter resolves 0.01 ohms, the temperature step is roughly 0.026C.
R0 is not always exactly 100 or 1000 ohms after installation. Element tolerance classes and aging can shift it slightly. For best results, measure resistance at a known reference point such as an ice bath and update R0 accordingly. Use the preset that matches your sensor standard, or apply certified coefficients if provided.
When converting from resistance to temperature, it is good practice to compute resistance again from the resulting temperature and compare. A small mismatch indicates rounding or convergence limits; a large mismatch usually signals wrong wiring assumptions, incorrect lead values, or a sensor not matching the selected standard.
Calibration records typically include measured resistance, corrected RTD resistance, computed temperature, and sensitivity at each point. CSV exports support traceable logs, while PDF summaries are convenient for quality documentation. Consistent rounding and units reduce reporting errors.
If resistance is below R0, temperature is typically below 0C. If temperature seems impossible, check units, connection type, and cable resistance. Confirm the range: most platinum RTDs operate from -200C to 850C. For fast troubleshooting, compare your value against typical points like 138.505 ohms at 100C for Pt100.
Pt100 is 100 ohms at 0C, while Pt1000 is 1000 ohms at 0C. Pt1000 provides a larger voltage signal for the same excitation current, often improving resolution and reducing relative lead-wire impact.
Below 0C, platinum resistance deviates from a simple quadratic fit. The additional cubic correction term improves accuracy for subzero operation, which matters in refrigeration, environmental testing, and low-temperature laboratories.
Measure the loop resistance of a known cable length with a multimeter, then divide by two to estimate per-wire resistance. Alternatively, use manufacturer data in ohms per meter and multiply by installed length.
Three-wire compensation assumes the two current-carrying leads have nearly equal resistance. If the leads differ significantly or the circuit is nonstandard, errors remain. For highest accuracy, use four-wire sensing.
Sensitivity is the resistance change per degree. It helps translate resistance noise into temperature noise. Higher sensitivity means better temperature resolution for a given measurement uncertainty in ohms.
Differences can come from probe class tolerance, self-heating due to excitation current, lead-wire effects, or the transmitter using a different standard curve. Verify R0, wiring method, and coefficients used by your instrument.
The implemented model and presets are intended for platinum RTDs. Other materials can use different coefficients and ranges. If you have published A, B, and C values for your element, custom mode may approximate behavior, but validate with reference data.
Accurate RTD conversions help design safer measurement control systems.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.