vne147
Member
I’m sure this topic has been covered before but I didn’t really find an answer to my specific question when I searched, maybe because I didn’t know the correct key words to search for. Anyway, I’m hoping someone can help me. Here’s what I’m doing.
I am building a temperature sensing circuit that will switch on a heater when it gets below a certain temperature. Yes, I know I can buy something to do this for very little money but I’m building it anyway.
I have an NTC type thermistor that has a resistance of 100k at 25 C but I want to maintain the temp between -5 C and -1 C. At those temps the thermistor has a resistance of 463K - 372K respectively. I’m placing the thermistor in series with another fixed 415k resistor to form a voltage divider that I am then feeding into a comparator which I’m using as a Schmitt trigger to generate a logic signal. The problem is that with my supply voltage of only 5 V and the range of temperature being as small as it is, the input into the comparator only changes by about 300 mV between -5 C and -1 C. I’m uncertain if it’s a good idea to have such a small range between on and off. It seems that the circuit might be more susceptible to noise that way.
Should amplify the voltage from the thermistor before feeding it into the comparator?
If I need to amplify it, what’s the best way? Op amp? Single transistor? Darlington pair?
I have tried to use a circuit like the one shown here as a “Voltage Converter” to amplify the input signal but that didn’t work so well.
Should I use a thermistor with a narrower range?
Should I use a higher supply voltage?
Should I quit electronics and take up knitting?
Here’s the schematic. I haven’t actually tested this circuit yet so if there are any blatant errors, please point them out to me. I hope I supplied all necessary information for a recommendation. Thanks.

I am building a temperature sensing circuit that will switch on a heater when it gets below a certain temperature. Yes, I know I can buy something to do this for very little money but I’m building it anyway.
I have an NTC type thermistor that has a resistance of 100k at 25 C but I want to maintain the temp between -5 C and -1 C. At those temps the thermistor has a resistance of 463K - 372K respectively. I’m placing the thermistor in series with another fixed 415k resistor to form a voltage divider that I am then feeding into a comparator which I’m using as a Schmitt trigger to generate a logic signal. The problem is that with my supply voltage of only 5 V and the range of temperature being as small as it is, the input into the comparator only changes by about 300 mV between -5 C and -1 C. I’m uncertain if it’s a good idea to have such a small range between on and off. It seems that the circuit might be more susceptible to noise that way.
Should amplify the voltage from the thermistor before feeding it into the comparator?
If I need to amplify it, what’s the best way? Op amp? Single transistor? Darlington pair?
I have tried to use a circuit like the one shown here as a “Voltage Converter” to amplify the input signal but that didn’t work so well.
Should I use a thermistor with a narrower range?
Should I use a higher supply voltage?
Should I quit electronics and take up knitting?
Here’s the schematic. I haven’t actually tested this circuit yet so if there are any blatant errors, please point them out to me. I hope I supplied all necessary information for a recommendation. Thanks.
