What is a Type E thermocouple ?
The type E thermocouple combines nickel-chrome (Chromel) and nickel-constantan (Constantan).
It is distinguished by its high sensitivity — the highest among common thermocouples — with approximately 68 µV/°C.
This makes it a very precise sensor for low temperatures, often used in laboratories, cryogenic systems, and precision testing devices.
Operating principle
Like all thermocouples, type E relies on the Seebeck effect: a temperature difference between the hot junction and the cold junction generates a measurable voltage.
E = Se × (T_hot - T_cold)
For type E:
S_E ≈ 68 µV/°C (around 0 °C)
→ which is about 6.8 mV for a 100 °C difference.
It produces about 61 mV at 1,000 °C, which is a sensitivity 30% higher than type K.
Technical specifications
| Parameter |
Typical Value |
| Measurement range | −270 → +1 000 °C |
| Sensitivity | 68 µV/°C to 0 °C |
| Tension at 1,000 °C | ≈ 61,0 mV |
| Linearity | ±0.4 °C over the useful range |
| Materials | Chromel (NiCr) / Constantan (CuNi) |
| Oxidation resistance | Medium |
| Response time (6 mm diameter sheath) | 1 s (liquid) / 3 s (air) |
| Reference standard | IEC 60584-1, ASTM E230 |
Voltage / Temperature Curve
(Reference: cold junction at 0 °C — IEC 60584-1 standard)
The relationship between temperature and the generated voltage is nearly linear over the useful measurement range (−200 to +900 °C).
Here is an overview of the typical curve 👇
📈 General behavior:
- From −200 °C to 0 °C → negative voltage, rapid variation (~−8.8 mV to 0 mV)
- From 0 °C to 900 °C → positive voltage, nearly linear (~0 to +55 mV)
- Average slope: ≈ 68 µV/°C
💡 This linearity simplifies the voltage ↔ temperature conversion and reduces calculation errors in digital systems.
Compatibility / Compensation
The E type requires a cold weld compensation above ±1 °C of ambient variation.
It is compatible with most SPI/I²C measurement modules (MAX31855-E, MAX6675, AD8495E, etc.).
Application areas
🧊 Cryogenics and cold rooms (-200 °C)
🧪 Laboratories and precision test benches
⚙️ Scientific and thermal instrumentation
🧱 Light industrial applications up to 900 °C
🚀 Aerospace instrumentation / light propulsion