HOW DOES A THERMOSTAT WORK?

Most things get bigger when they heat up and smaller when they cool down (water is a notable exception: it expands when it heats up and when it freezes too). Mechanical thermostats use this idea (which is called thermal expansion) to switch an electric circuit on and off. The two most common types use bimetallic strips and gas-filled bellows.

A thermostat has two pieces of different metals bolted together to form what’s called a bimetallic strip (or bimetal strip). The strip works as a bridge in an electrical circuit connected to your heating system. Normally the “bridge is down”, the strip carries electricity through the circuit, and the heating is on. When the strip gets hot, one of the metals expands more than the other so the whole strip bends very slightly. Eventually, it bends so much that it breaks open the circuit. The “bridge is up”, the electricity instantly switches off, the heating cuts out, and the room starts to cool.

But then what happens? As the room cools, the strip cools too and bends back to its original shape. Sooner or later, it snaps back into the circuit and makes the electricity flow again, so the heating switches back on. By adjusting the temperature dial, you change the temperature at which the circuit switches on and off. Because it takes some time for the metal strip to expand and contract, the heating isn’t constantly switching on and off every few seconds, which would be pointless (and quite irritating); depending on how well-insulated your home is, and how cold it is outside, it might take an hour or more for the thermostat to switch back on once it’s switched off.

Picture Credit : Google