Wheatstone bridge
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A Wheatstone bridge is a measuring instrument invented by Samuel Hunter Christie in 1833 and improved and popularized by Sir Charles Wheatstone in 1843. It is used to measure an unknown electrical resistance by balancing two legs of a bridge circuit, one leg of which includes the unknown component. Its operation is similar to the original potentiometer except that in potentiometer circuits the meter used is a sensitive galvanometer.
In the circuit to the left, [R_x] is the unknown resistance to be measured; [R_1], [R_2] and [R_3] are resistors of known resistance and the resistance of [R_2] is adjustable. If the ratio of the two resistances in the known leg [(R_1 / R_2)] is equal to the ratio of the two in the unknown leg [(R_x / R_3)], then the voltage between the two midpoints will be zero and no current will flow between the midpoints. [R_2] is varied until this condition is reached. The current direction indicates if [R_2] is too high or too low.
Detecting zero current can be done to extremely high accuracy (see Galvanometer). Therefore, if [R_1], [R_2] and [R_3] are known to high precision, then [R_x] can be measured to high precision. Very small changes in [R_x] disrupt the balance and are readily detected.
If the bridge is balanced, which means that the current through the galvanometer [R_g] is equal to zero, the equivalent resistance of the circuit between the source voltage terminals is:
[R_1 + R_2] in parallel with [R_3 + R_4]
- [R_E = ]
First, we can use the first Kirchhoff rule to find the currents in junctions B and C:
- [I_3\ - I_x\ - I_g\ =\ 0]
- [I_1\ + I_g\ - I_2\ =\ 0]
- [I_3 \cdot R_3 + I_g \cdot R_g - I_1 \cdot R_1 = 0]
- [I_x \cdot R_x - I_2 \cdot R_2 - I_g \cdot R_g = 0]
- [I_3 \cdot R_3 = I_1 \cdot R_1]
- [I_x \cdot R_x = I_2 \cdot R_2]
- [R_x = ]
- [R_x = ]
- [V = V_s - V_s]
- [V = \left( - \right)V_s]
The concept was extended to alternating current measurements by James Clerk Maxwell in 1865, and further improved by Alan Blumlein in about 1926.
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