Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean Thermometers

An accurate metrological investigation was performed on several units of the two de facto standards for deep-ocean temperature measurements—the SBE35 (the reference thermometer) and the SBE3 (the working thermometer) from SeaBird Scientific. Four SBE35 units were repeatedly calibrated against state-...

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Main Authors: Andrea Peruzzi, Rien Bosma, Jan van Geel, Sven Ober
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-04-01
Series:Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/9/4/398
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spelling doaj-c795f07370674e619234f896c79171a42021-04-09T23:01:00ZengMDPI AGJournal of Marine Science and Engineering2077-13122021-04-01939839810.3390/jmse9040398Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean ThermometersAndrea Peruzzi0Rien Bosma1Jan van Geel2Sven Ober3NRC, National Research Council, Ottawa, ON K1A 0R6, CanadaIndependent Researcher, 2565 JR The Hague, The NetherlandsVSL, Dutch Metrology Institute, 2629 JA Delft, The NetherlandsNIOZ, Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, Department of Ocean Systems, 1790 AB Texel, The NetherlandsAn accurate metrological investigation was performed on several units of the two de facto standards for deep-ocean temperature measurements—the SBE35 (the reference thermometer) and the SBE3 (the working thermometer) from SeaBird Scientific. Four SBE35 units were repeatedly calibrated against state-of-the-art fixed-point cells (triple point of water at 0.01 °C and melting point of gallium at 29.7646 °C), with calibration uncertainties of approximately 0.2 mK and 0.5 mK, respectively. Three SBE35 units and one SBE3 unit were calibrated in the temperature range 0 °C to 30 °C, again with sub-millikelvin calibration uncertainties, in a recently-developed water–bath calibration facility. All these calibrations evidenced (1) the deviation of each unit from its original manufacturer’s calibration (up to 1.7 mK), which were found to be inconsistent with the manufacturer’s uncertainty claims and (2) unexplained irreproducibilities, which could not be attributed to the calibration system of up to 1.5 mK. The effect of high pressures (up to 60 MPa) on the response of two SBE35 units was investigated by pressurizing the SBE35 units inside a purpose-built compact pressure enclosure. The results of the pressure investigation confirmed the existence of a small device-dependent pressure effect (approximately 0.3 mK at 60 MPa) and the need for individual temperature–pressure calibration of each SBE35 unit.https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/9/4/398ocean thermometerscalibrationpressure effect
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrea Peruzzi
Rien Bosma
Jan van Geel
Sven Ober
spellingShingle Andrea Peruzzi
Rien Bosma
Jan van Geel
Sven Ober
Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean Thermometers
Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
ocean thermometers
calibration
pressure effect
author_facet Andrea Peruzzi
Rien Bosma
Jan van Geel
Sven Ober
author_sort Andrea Peruzzi
title Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean Thermometers
title_short Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean Thermometers
title_full Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean Thermometers
title_fullStr Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean Thermometers
title_full_unstemmed Metrological Evaluation of Deep-Ocean Thermometers
title_sort metrological evaluation of deep-ocean thermometers
publisher MDPI AG
series Journal of Marine Science and Engineering
issn 2077-1312
publishDate 2021-04-01
description An accurate metrological investigation was performed on several units of the two de facto standards for deep-ocean temperature measurements—the SBE35 (the reference thermometer) and the SBE3 (the working thermometer) from SeaBird Scientific. Four SBE35 units were repeatedly calibrated against state-of-the-art fixed-point cells (triple point of water at 0.01 °C and melting point of gallium at 29.7646 °C), with calibration uncertainties of approximately 0.2 mK and 0.5 mK, respectively. Three SBE35 units and one SBE3 unit were calibrated in the temperature range 0 °C to 30 °C, again with sub-millikelvin calibration uncertainties, in a recently-developed water–bath calibration facility. All these calibrations evidenced (1) the deviation of each unit from its original manufacturer’s calibration (up to 1.7 mK), which were found to be inconsistent with the manufacturer’s uncertainty claims and (2) unexplained irreproducibilities, which could not be attributed to the calibration system of up to 1.5 mK. The effect of high pressures (up to 60 MPa) on the response of two SBE35 units was investigated by pressurizing the SBE35 units inside a purpose-built compact pressure enclosure. The results of the pressure investigation confirmed the existence of a small device-dependent pressure effect (approximately 0.3 mK at 60 MPa) and the need for individual temperature–pressure calibration of each SBE35 unit.
topic ocean thermometers
calibration
pressure effect
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-1312/9/4/398
work_keys_str_mv AT andreaperuzzi metrologicalevaluationofdeepoceanthermometers
AT rienbosma metrologicalevaluationofdeepoceanthermometers
AT janvangeel metrologicalevaluationofdeepoceanthermometers
AT svenober metrologicalevaluationofdeepoceanthermometers
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