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A very basic temperature sensor that is widely used in consumer electronics is the NTC thermistor. A common example of a temperature-sensitive semiconductor resistor is the NTC thermistor, whose resistance value drops incrementally as temperature rises. NTC thermistors are made of mixed oxide polycrystalline ceramics. For various events, different packaging of various materials are employed.
Negative Temperature Coefficient is referred to as NTC. The resistance of NTC thermistors reduces as temperature rises because they have a negative temperature coefficient. They are generally employed as current limiters and resistive temperature sensors. A silicon temperature sensor's (silicon oxide) temperature sensitivity coefficient is around five times higher than a resistance temperature detector's, which is ten times higher (RTD). NTC sensors are frequently employed between -55°C and 200°C.
The phrase "thermistor phenomena" and "material with a negative temperature coefficient that declines exponentially with temperature rise" refer to negative temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor, respectively. The finished product, a semiconductor ceramic, is created by thoroughly combining, shaping, and sintering two or more metal oxides, including those of manganese, copper, silicon, cobalt, iron, nickel, and zinc.