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I need to connect a thermocouple (output 0 to 10 V) to a BeagleBone Black. I have planned for a voltage divider circuit to do that as BeagleBone accepts only 1.8 V as its analog input. Do I need to provide an electrical isolation before the voltage divider circuit by integrating a linear optocoupler to ensure safety for the BeagleBone? Please suggest.

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    \$\begingroup\$ Typical thermocouples produce less than 100 mV output, even at pretty extreme temperatures. Yours probably has some amplifier circuit already attached. Can you just change the amplifier circuit to give 0-1.8 V range instead of 0-10 V? \$\endgroup\$
    – The Photon
    Commented May 25, 2015 at 14:11

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Most thermocouple signal conditioners (except the cheapest and nastiest) provide galvanic isolation both between the thermocouple and the output/power.

If you have an grounded-junction thermocouple, then isolation is recommended.

If you have an ungrounded junction sensor then you may be able to get away without isolation (but it's often bad practice, particularly in an electrically noisy environment).

Isolation methods are optical, magnetic or capacitive. You can look for isolation amplifiers if you need one, and for many you'll need (an) isolated supply(s) as well.

It's usually better to use a signal conditioner with built-in isolation because it will be made to the required accuracy and isolation standards (for example, capacitive coupling, which may be difficult for you to evaluate) and you'll get a guarantee of accuracy for the whole subsystem.

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