Hi All,
Most garden-variety liquid-in-glass thermometers which I have seen feature a temperature scale that goes from -20 C (-4 F) to 50 C (122 F). There are many places on Earth which get colder or hotter than this, so why this particular range? Does anyone know?
I have done a little digging and have asked around, but no one seems to know why this range is so popular. It does not seem to have much to do with the temperature range of the working fluid itself, as you can see from the table below (the last two entries are different names for the same thing). These are the most popular working fluids used in liquid-in-glass thermometers:
| Working Fluid | Min | Max | Min | Max |
| °C | °C | °F | °F |
| Pentane | -200 | 20 | -328 | 68 |
| Ethyl Alcohol | -80 | 70 | -112 | 158 |
| Kerosene | -20 | 300 | -4 | 572 |
| Mercury | -35 | 750 | -31 | 1382 |
| Toluene | -95 | 111 | -139 | 231.8 |
| Isoamyl Acetate | -78 | 142 | -108.4 | 287.6 |
| Isopentyl Acetate | -78 | 142 | -108.4 | 287.6 |
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