Why sensor choice matters
Temperature affects reaction rates, stability, and compliance. A poorly matched sensor can introduce measurement error, slow response time, or validation headaches. Selecting the right probe saves time, reduces rework, and supports regulatory traceability for QA/QC and pharmaceutical workflows.
Key outcomes of a good selection:
- Consistent, accurate measurements with minimal drift.
- Faster detection of temperature excursions to protect samples and reagents.
- Easier calibration, documentation, and regulatory compliance.
Key specifications to evaluate
When comparing sensors, focus on core specifications to ensure the device meets your application needs, environmental limits, and compliance requirements.
- Accuracy: how close the reading is to the true temperature (for example ±0.1 °C).
- Range: operating limits (for example −40 °C to +125 °C) to ensure full coverage of expected temperatures.
- Resolution and precision: smallest readable increment and repeatability between measurements.
- Response time (tau): how quickly the sensor reads changes; important for small-volume or fast-cycling processes.
- Stability and drift: long-term change in output, impacting calibration frequency.
- Probe material and tip size: stainless steel, glass, or polymer; micro-tips for microplates vs robust shafts for storage monitoring.
- Connector and compatibility: meter, data logger, or recorder interfaces for plug-and-play operation.
- Data logging and sampling interval: required for continuous monitoring and audit trails.