Core Component Structure
To understand the principle, one must first know its three key components:
- Temperature Sensing Probe (Capillary Tube): This is a very long, thin copper or stainless steel tube filled with a temperature-sensitive medium (typically a mixture like chloromethane or propane). It acts as the system's "temperature sensor."
- Bellows or Diaphragm: This is an elastic element made of thin metal, located inside the thermostat's main body. It can expand and contract and serves as the system's "actuator."
- Snap-Action Switch & Contacts: This is the electrical switch that breaks or completes the circuit. It is the "command center" for the controlled system.

The Five-Step Control Cycle Explained
Step 1: Sensing
When the ambient temperature (e.g., inside a water heater tank, coffee machine boiler, or incubator) changes, it is detected directly by the sensing probe. The thermal medium inside the probe reacts instantly due to its physical properties (thermal expansion of liquid or vaporization creating pressure).
- During Heating: Temperature increases → The thermal medium expands (if liquid) or rapidly vaporizes (if liquid-vapor mix) → causing a significant increase in pressure inside the probe.
- During Cooling: Temperature decreases → The thermal medium cools and contracts or condenses → causing a corresponding decrease in pressure.

Step 2: Transmission
The pressure change inside the sensing probe is instantaneously transmitted without loss through the sealed medium to the bellows (or diaphragm) chamber at the end of the thermostat. The capillary tube acts like a "pressure nerve," precisely relaying the remote temperature signal to the control center.

Step 3: Actuation (Deformation)
The bellows is the core "energy converter" in this process.
- When Pressure Increases: The pressure in the bellows chamber rises, overcoming its resistance to elastic deformation, causing it to expand linearly.
- When Pressure Decreases: The pressure in the chamber drops, allowing the bellows to contract back to its original position using its own elasticity or with the help of a spring.

This tiny, precise linear displacement is the key to converting an intangible pressure signal into a tangible mechanical action.
Step 4: Triggering (Switching)
The linear displacement of the bellows is transferred via a precision mechanism (often a lever or pushrod) to the snap-action switch.
- Set Temperature Reached (e.g., water reaches 100°C): The bellows expansion provides sufficient displacement. The pushrod triggers the switch's mechanism, causing it to snap open with a rapid "over-center" action. This quick break is crucial to prevent arcing, protect the electrical contacts, and ensure long life.
- Temperature Falls Below Setpoint (e.g., water cools to 90°C): The bellows contracts, reducing the displacement. When it retracts to a specific point, the switch mechanism, aided by a return spring, snaps back to its "over-center" position, reconnecting the circuit and restarting the heater.

Step 5: Reset & Cycle
After the circuit breaks, heating stops, and the temperature begins to drop. As the temperature falls, the pressure decreases, and the bellows contracts, resetting the system for the next cycle. This process repeats continuously, forming a closed-loop feedback system that maintains temperature within a precise set range.

Example Applications
- Storage Water Heaters: Controlling heating elements to maintain set water temperature.
- Coffee Machines/Water Dispensers: Precisely regulating boiler temperature for optimal brewing.
- Temperature Holding Cabinets: Such as food display warmers and medical equipment incubators.
- Small Heating Systems: Controlling temperature for oil-filled radiators and space heaters.

Summary:
The capillary thermostat is a masterpiece of applied physics. It captures a temperature signal via the probe, converts it to a pressure signal, transmits it via the capillary tube, transforms it into mechanical movement via the bellows, and finally, actuates the snap-action switch for a clean electrical break. The entire process is seamless, robust, and highly efficient.





