LM34CAZ National Semiconductor, LM34CAZ Datasheet - Page 6

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LM34CAZ

Manufacturer Part Number
LM34CAZ
Description
IC,TEMPERATURE SENSOR,BIPOLAR,SIP,3PIN,PLASTIC
Manufacturer
National Semiconductor
Datasheets

Specifications of LM34CAZ

Svhc
NO SVHC
Rohs Compliant
NO

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Typical Performance Characteristics
Noise Voltage
Typical Applications
The LM34 can be applied easily in the same way as other
integrated-circuit temperature sensors. It can be glued or
cemented to a surface and its temperature will be within
about 0.02˚F of the surface temperature. This presumes that
the ambient air temperature is almost the same as the
surface temperature; if the air temperature were much
higher or lower than the surface temperature, the actual
temperature of the LM34 die would be at an intermediate
temperature between the surface temperature and the air
temperature. This is expecially true for the TO-92 plastic
package, where the copper leads are the principal thermal
path to carry heat into the device, so its temperature might
be closer to the air temperature than to the surface tempera-
ture.
To minimize this problem, be sure that the wiring to the
LM34, as it leaves the device, is held at the same tempera-
ture as the surface of interest. The easiest way to do this is
to cover up these wires with a bead of epoxy which will
insure that the leads and wires are all at the same tempera-
ture as the surface, and that the LM34 die’s temperature will
not be affected by the air temperature.
The TO-46 metal package can also be soldered to a metal
surface or pipe without damage. Of course in that case, the
V
Alternatively, the LM34 can be mounted inside a sealed-end
metal tube, and can then be dipped into a bath or screwed
into a threaded hole in a tank. As with any IC, the LM34 and
accompanying wiring and circuits must be kept insulated and
dry, to avoid leakage and corrosion. This is especially true if
the circuit may operate at cold temperatures where conden-
sation can occur. Printed-circuit coatings and varnishes such
as Humiseal and epoxy paints or dips are often used to
insure that moisture cannot corrode the LM34 or its connec-
tions.
terminal of the circuit will be grounded to that metal.
DS006685-6
DS006685-31
Start-Up Response
(Continued)
6
These devices are sometimes soldered to a small,
light-weight heat fin to decrease the thermal time constant
and speed up the response in slowly-moving air. On the
other hand, a small thermal mass may be added to the
sensor to give the steadiest reading despite small deviations
in the air temperature.
Capacitive Loads
Like most micropower circuits, the LM34 has a limited ability
to drive heavy capacitive loads. The LM34 by itself is able to
drive 50 pF without special precautions. If heavier loads are
anticipated, it is easy to isolate or decouple the load with a
resistor; see Figure 3 . Or you can improve the tolerance of
capacitance with a series R-C damper from output to
ground; see Figure 4 . When the LM34 is applied with a 499
load resistor (as shown), it is relatively immune to wiring
capacitance because the capacitance forms a bypass from
ground to input, not on the output. However, as with any
linear circuit connected to wires in a hostile environment, its
performance can be affected adversely by intense electro-
magnetic sources such as relays, radio transmitters, motors
with arcing brushes, SCR’s transients, etc., as its wiring can
act as a receiving antenna and its internal junctions can act
as rectifiers. For best results in such cases, a bypass ca-
pacitor from V
75 in series with 0.2 or 1 µF from output to ground are often
useful. These are shown in the following circuits.
IN
to ground and a series R-C damper such as
DS006685-32

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