AC bridge circuits
As we saw with DC measurement circuits,
the circuit configuration known as a bridge can be a very useful
way to measure unknown values of resistance. This is true with AC as
well, and we can apply the very same principle to the accurate
measurement of unknown impedances.
To review, the bridge circuit works as a
pair of two-component voltage dividers connected across the same source
voltage, with a null-detector meter movement connected between
them to indicate a condition of "balance" at zero volts:
Any one of the four resistors in the
above bridge can be the resistor of unknown value, and its value can be
determined by a ratio of the other three, which are "calibrated," or
whose resistances are known to a precise degree. When the bridge is in a
balanced condition (zero voltage as indicated by the null detector), the
ratio works out to be this:
One of the advantages of using a bridge
circuit to measure resistance is that the voltage of the power source is
irrelevant. Practically speaking, the higher the supply voltage, the
easier it is to detect a condition of imbalance between the four
resistors with the null detector, and thus the more sensitive it will
be. A greater supply voltage leads to the possibility of increased
measurement precision. However, there will be no fundamental error
introduced as a result of a lesser or greater power supply voltage
unlike other types of resistance measurement schemes.
Impedance bridges work the same, only the
balance equation is with complex quantities, as both magnitude
and phase across the components of the two dividers must be equal in
order for the null detector to indicate "zero." The null detector, of
course, must be a device capable of detecting very small AC voltages. An
oscilloscope is often used for this, although very sensitive
electromechanical meter movements and even headphones (small speakers)
may be used if the source frequency is within audio range.
One way to maximize the effectiveness of
audio headphones as a null detector is to connect them to the signal
source through an impedance-matching transformer. Headphone speakers are
typically low-impedance units (8 Ω), requiring substantial current to
drive, and so a step-down transformer helps "match" low-current signals
to the impedance of the headphone speakers. An audio output transformer
works well for this purpose:
Using a pair of headphones that
completely surround the ears (the "closed-cup" type), I've been able to
detect currents of less than 0.1 µA with this simple detector circuit.
Roughly equal performance was obtained using two different step-down
transformers: a small power transformer (120/6 volt ratio), and an audio
output transformer (1000:8 ohm impedance ratio). With the pushbutton
switch in place to interrupt current, this circuit is usable for
detecting signals from DC to over 2 MHz: even if the frequency is far
above or below the audio range, a "click" will be heard from the
headphones each time the switch is pressed and released.
Connected to a resistive bridge, the
whole circuit looks like this:
Listening to the headphones as one or
more of the resistor "arms" of the bridge is adjusted, a condition of
balance will be realized when the headphones fail to produce "clicks"
(or tones, if the bridge's power source frequency is within audio range)
as the switch is actuated.
When describing general AC bridges, where
impedances and not just resistances must be in proper ratio for
balance, it is sometimes helpful to draw the respective bridge legs in
the form of box-shaped components, each one with a certain impedance:
For this general form of AC bridge to
balance, the impedance ratios of each branch must be equal:
Again, it must be stressed that the
impedance quantities in the above equation must be complex,
accounting for both magnitude and phase angle. It is insufficient that
the impedance magnitudes alone be balanced; without phase angles in
balance as well, there will still be voltage across the terminals of the
null detector and the bridge will not be balanced.
Bridge circuits can be constructed to
measure just about any device value desired, be it capacitance,
inductance, resistance, or even "Q." As always in bridge measurement
circuits, the unknown quantity is always "balanced" against a known
standard, obtained from a high-quality, calibrated component that can be
adjusted in value until the null detector device indicates a condition
of balance. Depending on how the bridge is set up, the unknown
component's value may be determined directly from the setting of the
calibrated standard, or derived from that standard through a
mathematical formula.
A couple of simple bridge circuits are
shown below, one for inductance and one for capacitance:
Simple "symmetrical" bridges such as
these are so named because they exhibit symmetry (mirror-image
similarity) from left to right. The two bridge circuits shown above are
balanced by adjusting the calibrated reactive component (Ls
or Cs). They are a bit simplified from their real-life
counterparts, as practical symmetrical bridge circuits often have a
calibrated, variable resistor in series or parallel with the reactive
component to balance out stray resistance in the unknown component. But,
in the hypothetical world of perfect components, these simple bridge
circuits do just fine to illustrate the basic concept.
An example of a little extra complexity
added to compensate for real-world effects can be found in the so-called
Wien bridge, which uses a parallel capacitor-resistor standard
impedance to balance out an unknown series capacitor-resistor
combination. All capacitors have some amount of internal resistance, be
it literal or equivalent (in the form of dielectric heating losses)
which tend to spoil their otherwise perfectly reactive natures. This
internal resistance may be of interest to measure, and so the Wien
bridge attempts to do so by providing a balancing impedance that isn't
"pure" either:
Being that there are two standard
components to be adjusted (a resistor and a capacitor) this bridge will
take a little more time to balance than the others we've seen so far.
The combined effect of Rs and Cs is to alter the
magnitude and phase angle until the bridge achieves a condition of
balance. Once that balance is achieved, the settings of Rs
and Cs can be read from their calibrated knobs, the parallel
impedance of the two determined mathematically, and the unknown
capacitance and resistance determined mathematically from the balance
equation (Z1/Z2 = Z3/Z4).
It is assumed in the operation of the
Wien bridge that the standard capacitor has negligible internal
resistance, or at least that resistance is already known so that it can
be factored into the balance equation. Wien bridges are useful for
determining the values of "lossy" capacitor designs like electrolytics,
where the internal resistance is relatively high. They are also used as
frequency meters, because the balance of the bridge is
frequency-dependent. When used in this fashion, the capacitors are made
fixed (and usually of equal value) and the top two resistors are made
variable and are adjusted by means of the same knob.
An interesting variation on this theme is
found in the next bridge circuit, used to precisely measure inductances.
This ingenious bridge circuit is known as
the Maxwell-Wien bridge (sometimes known plainly as the
Maxwell bridge), and is used to measure unknown inductances in terms
of calibrated resistance and capacitance. Calibration-grade inductors
are more difficult to manufacture than capacitors of similar precision,
and so the use of a simple "symmetrical" inductance bridge is not always
practical. Because the phase shifts of inductors and capacitors are
exactly opposite each other, a capacitive impedance can balance out an
inductive impedance if they are located in opposite legs of a bridge, as
they are here.
Another advantage of using a Maxwell
bridge to measure inductance rather than a symmetrical inductance bridge
is the elimination of measurement error due to mutual inductance between
two inductors. Magnetic fields can be difficult to shield, and even a
small amount of coupling between coils in a bridge can introduce
substantial errors in certain conditions. With no second inductor to
react with in the Maxwell bridge, this problem is eliminated.
For easiest operation, the standard
capacitor (Cs) and the resistor in parallel with it (Rs)
are made variable, and both must be adjusted to achieve balance.
However, the bridge can be made to work if the capacitor is fixed
(non-variable) and more than one resistor made variable (at least the
resistor in parallel with the capacitor, and one of the other two).
However, in the latter configuration it takes more trial-and-error
adjustment to achieve balance, as the different variable resistors
interact in balancing magnitude and phase.
Unlike the plain Wien bridge, the balance
of the Maxwell-Wien bridge is independent of source frequency, and in
some cases this bridge can be made to balance in the presence of mixed
frequencies from the AC voltage source, the limiting factor being the
inductor's stability over a wide frequency range.
There are more variations beyond these
designs, but a full discussion is not warranted here. General-purpose
impedance bridge circuits are manufactured which can be switched into
more than one configuration for maximum flexibility of use.
A potential problem in sensitive AC
bridge circuits is that of stray capacitance between either end of the
null detector unit and ground (earth) potential. Because capacitances
can "conduct" alternating current by charging and discharging, they form
stray current paths to the AC voltage source which may affect bridge
balance:
The problem is worsened if the AC voltage
source is firmly grounded at one end, the total stray impedance for
leakage currents made far less and any leakage currents through these
stray capacitances made greater as a result:
One way of greatly reducing this effect
is to keep the null detector at ground potential, so there will be no AC
voltage between it and the ground, and thus no current through stray
capacitances. However, directly connecting the null detector to ground
is not an option, as it would create a direct current path for
stray currents, which would be worse than any capacitive path. Instead,
a special voltage divider circuit called a Wagner ground or
Wagner earth may be used to maintain the null detector at ground
potential without the need for a direct connection to the null detector.
The Wagner earth circuit is nothing more
than a voltage divider, designed to have the voltage ratio and phase
shift as each side of the bridge. Because the midpoint of the Wagner
divider is directly grounded, any other divider circuit (including
either side of the bridge) having the same voltage proportions and
phases as the Wagner divider, and powered by the same AC voltage source,
will be at ground potential as well. Thus, the Wagner earth divider
forces the null detector to be at ground potential, without a direct
connection between the detector and ground.
There is often a provision made in the
null detector connection to confirm proper setting of the Wagner earth
divider circuit: a two-position switch, so that one end of the null
detector may be connected to either the bridge or the Wagner earth. When
the null detector registers zero signal in both switch positions, the
bridge is not only guaranteed to be balanced, but the null detector is
also guaranteed to be at zero potential with respect to ground, thus
eliminating any errors due to leakage currents through stray
detector-to-ground capacitances:
- REVIEW:
- AC bridge circuits work on the same
basic principle as DC bridge circuits: that a balanced ratio of
impedances (rather than resistances) will result in a "balanced"
condition as indicated by the null-detector device.
- Null detectors for AC bridges may be
sensitive electromechanical meter movements, oscilloscopes (CRT's),
headphones (amplified or unamplified), or any other device capable of
registering very small AC voltage levels. Like DC null detectors, its
only required point of calibration accuracy is at zero.
- AC bridge circuits can be of the
"symmetrical" type where an unknown impedance is balanced by a
standard impedance of similar type on the same side (top or bottom) of
the bridge. Or, they can be "nonsymmetrical," using parallel
impedances to balance series impedances, or even capacitances
balancing out inductances.
- AC bridge circuits often have more
than one adjustment, since both impedance magnitude and phase
angle must be properly matched to balance.
- Some impedance bridge circuits are
frequency-sensitive while others are not. The frequency-sensitive
types may be used as frequency measurement devices if all component
values are accurately known.
- A Wagner earth or Wagner
ground is a voltage divider circuit added to AC bridges to help
reduce errors due to stray capacitance coupling the null detector to
ground.
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