5699 High-Temperature Metal-Sheath SPRT
Key features
- Range up to the aluminum point (660 °C).
- Features Inconel™ and platinum sheaths that guard against contamination .
- Less than 8 mK/year drift.
- Usable in virtually any furnace or bath with temperatures as high as 670 °C.
Product overview: 5699 High-Temperature Metal-Sheath SPRT
Designed and manufactured by our primary standards metrologists, the strain-free sensing element in the 5699 meets all ITS-90 requirements for SPRTs and minimizes long-term drift.
After one year of regular usage, drift is less than 0.008 °C (< 0.003 °C is typical). Even lower drift rates are possible depending on care and handling. A fifth wire for grounding is added to the four-wire sensor to help reduce electrical noise, particularly for AC measurements. Finally, you can get an improved version of an old industry-standard Inconel-sheathed SPRT.
The 5699 is constructed with a 0.219-inch-diameter Inconel sheath for high durability and fast response times. Inside the sheath, the sensing element is protected by a thin platinum housing that shields the sensor from contamination from free-floating metal ions found within metal environments at high temperatures. Reduced contamination means a low drift rate—even after hours of use in metal-block furnaces at high temperatures.
If you choose not to calibrate the 5699 yourself, a wide variety of options are available from Fluke Calibration’s own primary standards laboratory, including fixed-point calibrations covering any range between –200 °C and 661 °C.
At Fluke Calibration, we use SPRTs every day. We design them, build them, calibrate them, use them as standards, and know what it takes to make a reliably performing instrument. Why buy from anyone else?
Specifications: 5699 High-Temperature Metal-Sheath SPRT
Specifications | |
Temperature Range | –200 °C to 661 °C (recommended annealing temperature 665 °C) |
Nominal RTPW | 25.5Ω (± 0.5Ω) |
Current | 1 mA |
Resistance Ratio | W(302.9146 K) ≥ 1.11807 W(234.3156 K) ≤ 0.844235 |
Sensitivity | 0.1 Ω/ °C |
Drift Rate | < 0.008 °C/year (< 0.003 °C/year typical) |
Repeatability | < 1 mK |
Self-heating at TPW | < 0.001 °C under 1 mA current |
Reproducibility | ± 0.001 °C or better |
RTPW Drift After Thermal Cycling | < 0.001 °C |
Diameter of Pt Sensor Wire | 0.07 mm (0.003 in) |
Lead Wires | Four sensor wires plus grounding wire |
Protective Sheath | Inconel |
Diameter: | 5.56 mm ± 0.13 mm (0.219 in ± 0.005 in) |
Length: | 482 mm (19 in) |
Insulation Resistance | > 100 MΩ at 661 °C > 1000 MΩ at 20 °C |
Models: 5699 High-Temperature Metal-Sheath SPRT
PRT Calibration, –200 °C to 660 °C, NVLAP Accredited
Manuals + resources: 5699 High-Temperature Metal-Sheath SPRT
- A Monte Carlo Analysis of the Effects of Covariance on Propagated Uncertainties
- Achieving 0.25 mK Uncertainty with an Integrated-Circuit Resistance Thermometer Readout
- Demonstrating Competency and Equivalency of Two Commercial SPRT Calibration Facilities
- Establishment of a Primary Temperature Standards Laboratory
- Experimental Study of Different Filling Gases on the Stability of Metal-Sheathed Standard Platinum Resistance Thermometers
- Fixed Points for Secondary Level and Industrial Calibration
- How Does Temperature Non-uniformity of an Annealing Furnace Affect SPRT Stability?
- Improving productivity in a temperature calibration laboratory
- Improving the Stability of Standard Platinum Resistance Thermometers
- Long-Term Resistance and Ratio Stability of SPRTS, Comparing Metal Sheaths vs. Fused Silica Sheaths
- Temperature Calibration Equipment: A Technician's Guide
- Using a Mini Triple Point of Water System to Improve Reliability in a Temperature Calibration Laboratory
- Why Use a Triple Point of Water?