Voltage divider circuits
Let's analyze a simple series circuit, determining the voltage
drops across individual resistors:
From the given values of individual resistances, we can determine
a total circuit resistance, knowing that resistances add in series:
From here, we can use Ohm's Law (I=E/R) to determine the total
current, which we know will be the same as each resistor current,
currents being equal in all parts of a series circuit:
Now, knowing that the circuit current is 2 mA, we can use Ohm's
Law (E=IR) to calculate voltage across each resistor:
It should be apparent that the voltage drop across each resistor
is proportional to its resistance, given that the current is the
same through all resistors. Notice how the voltage across R2
is double that of the voltage across R1, just as the
resistance of R2 is double that of R1.
If we were to change the total voltage, we would find this
proportionality of voltage drops remains constant:
The voltage across R2 is still exactly twice that of R1's
drop, despite the fact that the source voltage has changed. The
proportionality of voltage drops (ratio of one to another) is
strictly a function of resistance values.
With a little more observation, it becomes apparent that the
voltage drop across each resistor is also a fixed proportion of the
supply voltage. The voltage across R1, for example, was
10 volts when the battery supply was 45 volts. When the battery
voltage was increased to 180 volts (4 times as much), the voltage
drop across R1 also increased by a factor of 4 (from 10
to 40 volts). The ratio between R1's voltage drop
and total voltage, however, did not change:
Likewise, none of the other voltage drop ratios changed with the
increased supply voltage either:
For this reason a series circuit is often called a voltage
divider for its ability to proportion -- or divide -- the total
voltage into fractional portions of constant ratio. With a little
bit of algebra, we can derive a formula for determining series
resistor voltage drop given nothing more than total voltage,
individual resistance, and total resistance:
The ratio of individual resistance to total resistance is the
same as the ratio of individual voltage drop to total supply voltage
in a voltage divider circuit. This is known as the voltage
divider formula, and it is a short-cut method for determining
voltage drop in a series circuit without going through the current
calculation(s) of Ohm's Law.
Using this formula, we can re-analyze the example circuit's
voltage drops in fewer steps:
Voltage dividers find wide application in electric meter
circuits, where specific combinations of series resistors are used
to "divide" a voltage into precise proportions as part of a voltage
measurement device.
One device frequently used as a voltage-dividing component is the
potentiometer, which is a resistor with a movable element
positioned by a manual knob or lever. The movable element, typically
called a wiper, makes contact with a resistive strip of
material (commonly called the slidewire if made of resistive
metal wire) at any point selected by the manual control:
The wiper contact is the left-facing arrow symbol drawn in the
middle of the vertical resistor element. As it is moved up, it
contacts the resistive strip closer to terminal 1 and further away
from terminal 2, lowering resistance to terminal 1 and raising
resistance to terminal 2. As it is moved down, the opposite effect
results. The resistance as measured between terminals 1 and 2 is
constant for any wiper position.
Shown here are internal illustrations of two potentiometer types,
rotary and linear:
Some linear potentiometers are actuated by straight-line motion
of a lever or slide button. Others, like the one depicted in the
previous illustration, are actuated by a turn-screw for fine
adjustment ability. The latter units are sometimes referred to as
trimpots, because they work well for applications requiring a
variable resistance to be "trimmed" to some precise value. It should
be noted that not all linear potentiometers have the same terminal
assignments as shown in this illustration. With some, the wiper
terminal is in the middle, between the two end terminals.
The following photograph shows a real, rotary potentiometer with
exposed wiper and slidewire for easy viewing. The shaft which moves
the wiper has been turned almost fully clockwise so that the wiper
is nearly touching the left terminal end of the slidewire:
Here is the same potentiometer with the wiper shaft moved almost
to the full-counterclockwise position, so that the wiper is near the
other extreme end of travel:
If a constant voltage is applied between the outer terminals
(across the length of the slidewire), the wiper position will tap
off a fraction of the applied voltage, measurable between the wiper
contact and either of the other two terminals. The fractional value
depends entirely on the physical position of the wiper:
Just like the fixed voltage divider, the potentiometer's voltage
division ratio is strictly a function of resistance and not
of the magnitude of applied voltage. In other words, if the
potentiometer knob or lever is moved to the 50 percent (exact
center) position, the voltage dropped between wiper and either
outside terminal would be exactly 1/2 of the applied voltage, no
matter what that voltage happens to be, or what the end-to-end
resistance of the potentiometer is. In other words, a potentiometer
functions as a variable voltage divider where the voltage division
ratio is set by wiper position.
This application of the potentiometer is a very useful means of
obtaining a variable voltage from a fixed-voltage source such as a
battery. If a circuit you're building requires a certain amount of
voltage that is less than the value of an available battery's
voltage, you may connect the outer terminals of a potentiometer
across that battery and "dial up" whatever voltage you need between
the potentiometer wiper and one of the outer terminals for use in
your circuit:
When used in this manner, the name potentiometer makes
perfect sense: they meter (control) the potential
(voltage) applied across them by creating a variable voltage-divider
ratio. This use of the three-terminal potentiometer as a variable
voltage divider is very popular in circuit design.
Shown here are several small potentiometers of the kind commonly
used in consumer electronic equipment and by hobbyists and students
in constructing circuits:
The smaller units on the very left and very right are designed to
plug into a solderless breadboard or be soldered into a printed
circuit board. The middle units are designed to be mounted on a flat
panel with wires soldered to each of the three terminals.
Here are three more potentiometers, more specialized than the set
just shown:
The large "Helipot" unit is a laboratory potentiometer designed
for quick and easy connection to a circuit. The unit in the
lower-left corner of the photograph is the same type of
potentiometer, just without a case or 10-turn counting dial. Both of
these potentiometers are precision units, using multi-turn
helical-track resistance strips and wiper mechanisms for making
small adjustments. The unit on the lower-right is a panel-mount
potentiometer, designed for rough service in industrial
applications.
- REVIEW:
- Series circuits proportion, or divide, the total supply
voltage among individual voltage drops, the proportions being
strictly dependent upon resistances: ERn = ETotal
(Rn / RTotal)
- A potentiometer is a variable-resistance component with three
connection points, frequently used as an adjustable voltage
divider.
Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (KVL)
Let's take another look at our example series circuit, this time
numbering the points in the circuit for voltage reference:
If we were to connect a voltmeter between points 2 and 1, red
test lead to point 2 and black test lead to point 1, the meter would
register +45 volts. Typically the "+" sign is not shown, but rather
implied, for positive readings in digital meter displays. However,
for this lesson the polarity of the voltage reading is very
important and so I will show positive numbers explicitly:
When a voltage is specified with a double subscript (the
characters "2-1" in the notation "E2-1"), it means the
voltage at the first point (2) as measured in reference to the
second point (1). A voltage specified as "Ecg" would mean
the voltage as indicated by a digital meter with the red test lead
on point "c" and the black test lead on point "g": the voltage at
"c" in reference to "g".
If we were to take that same voltmeter and measure the voltage
drop across each resistor, stepping around the circuit in a
clockwise direction with the red test lead of our meter on the point
ahead and the black test lead on the point behind, we would obtain
the following readings:
We should already be familiar with the general principle for
series circuits stating that individual voltage drops add up to the
total applied voltage, but measuring voltage drops in this manner
and paying attention to the polarity (mathematical sign) of the
readings reveals another facet of this principle: that the voltages
measured as such all add up to zero:
This principle is known as Kirchhoff's Voltage Law
(discovered in 1847 by Gustav R. Kirchhoff, a German physicist), and
it can be stated as such:
"The algebraic sum of all voltages in a loop must equal
zero"
By algebraic, I mean accounting for signs (polarities) as
well as magnitudes. By loop, I mean any path traced from one
point in a circuit around to other points in that circuit, and
finally back to the initial point. In the above example the loop was
formed by following points in this order: 1-2-3-4-1. It doesn't
matter which point we start at or which direction we proceed in
tracing the loop; the voltage sum will still equal zero. To
demonstrate, we can tally up the voltages in loop 3-2-1-4-3 of the
same circuit:
This may make more sense if we re-draw our example series circuit
so that all components are represented in a straight line:
It's still the same series circuit, just with the components
arranged in a different form. Notice the polarities of the resistor
voltage drops with respect to the battery: the battery's voltage is
negative on the left and positive on the right, whereas all the
resistor voltage drops are oriented the other way: positive on the
left and negative on the right. This is because the resistors are
resisting the flow of electrons being pushed by the battery. In
other words, the "push" exerted by the resistors against the
flow of electrons must be in a direction opposite the source
of electromotive force.
Here we see what a digital voltmeter would indicate across each
component in this circuit, black lead on the left and red lead on
the right, as laid out in horizontal fashion:
If we were to take that same voltmeter and read voltage across
combinations of components, starting with only R1 on the
left and progressing across the whole string of components, we will
see how the voltages add algebraically (to zero):
The fact that series voltages add up should be no mystery, but we
notice that the polarity of these voltages makes a lot of
difference in how the figures add. While reading voltage across R1,
R1--R2, and R1--R2--R3
(I'm using a "double-dash" symbol "--" to represent the series
connection between resistors R1, R2, and R3),
we see how the voltages measure successively larger (albeit
negative) magnitudes, because the polarities of the individual
voltage drops are in the same orientation (positive left, negative
right). The sum of the voltage drops across R1, R2,
and R3 equals 45 volts, which is the same as the
battery's output, except that the battery's polarity is opposite
that of the resistor voltage drops (negative left, positive right),
so we end up with 0 volts measured across the whole string of
components.
That we should end up with exactly 0 volts across the whole
string should be no mystery, either. Looking at the circuit, we can
see that the far left of the string (left side of R1:
point number 2) is directly connected to the far right of the string
(right side of battery: point number 2), as necessary to complete
the circuit. Since these two points are directly connected, they are
electrically common to each other. And, as such, the voltage
between those two electrically common points must be zero.
Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (sometimes denoted as KVL for
short) will work for any circuit configuration at all, not
just simple series. Note how it works for this parallel circuit:
Being a parallel circuit, the voltage across every resistor is
the same as the supply voltage: 6 volts. Tallying up voltages around
loop 2-3-4-5-6-7-2, we get:
Note how I label the final (sum) voltage as E2-2.
Since we began our loop-stepping sequence at point 2 and ended at
point 2, the algebraic sum of those voltages will be the same as the
voltage measured between the same point (E2-2), which of
course must be zero.
The fact that this circuit is parallel instead of series has
nothing to do with the validity of Kirchhoff's Voltage Law. For that
matter, the circuit could be a "black box" -- its component
configuration completely hidden from our view, with only a set of
exposed terminals for us to measure voltage between -- and KVL would
still hold true:
Try any order of steps from any terminal in the above diagram,
stepping around back to the original terminal, and you'll find that
the algebraic sum of the voltages always equals zero.
Furthermore, the "loop" we trace for KVL doesn't even have to be
a real current path in the closed-circuit sense of the word. All we
have to do to comply with KVL is to begin and end at the same point
in the circuit, tallying voltage drops and polarities as we go
between the next and the last point. Consider this absurd example,
tracing "loop" 2-3-6-3-2 in the same parallel resistor circuit:
KVL can be used to determine an unknown voltage in a complex
circuit, where all other voltages around a particular "loop" are
known. Take the following complex circuit (actually two series
circuits joined by a single wire at the bottom) as an example:
To make the problem simpler, I've omitted resistance values and
simply given voltage drops across each resistor. The two series
circuits share a common wire between them (wire 7-8-9-10), making
voltage measurements between the two circuits possible. If we
wanted to determine the voltage between points 4 and 3, we could set
up a KVL equation with the voltage between those points as the
unknown:
Stepping around the loop 3-4-9-8-3, we write the voltage drop
figures as a digital voltmeter would register them, measuring with
the red test lead on the point ahead and black test lead on the
point behind as we progress around the loop. Therefore, the voltage
from point 9 to point 4 is a positive (+) 12 volts because the "red
lead" is on point 9 and the "black lead" is on point 4. The voltage
from point 3 to point 8 is a positive (+) 20 volts because the "red
lead" is on point 3 and the "black lead" is on point 8. The voltage
from point 8 to point 9 is zero, of course, because those two points
are electrically common.
Our final answer for the voltage from point 4 to point 3 is a
negative (-) 32 volts, telling us that point 3 is actually positive
with respect to point 4, precisely what a digital voltmeter would
indicate with the red lead on point 4 and the black lead on point 3:
In other words, the initial placement of our "meter leads" in
this KVL problem was "backwards." Had we generated our KVL equation
starting with E3-4 instead of E4-3, stepping
around the same loop with the opposite meter lead orientation, the
final answer would have been E3-4 = +32 volts:
It is important to realize that neither approach is "wrong." In
both cases, we arrive at the correct assessment of voltage between
the two points, 3 and 4: point 3 is positive with respect to point
4, and the voltage between them is 32 volts.
- REVIEW:
- Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (KVL): "The algebraic sum of all
voltages in a loop must equal zero"
Current divider circuits
Let's analyze a simple parallel circuit, determining the branch
currents through individual resistors:
Knowing that voltages across all components in a parallel circuit
are the same, we can fill in our voltage/current/resistance table
with 6 volts across the top row:
Using Ohm's Law (I=E/R) we can calculate each branch current:
Knowing that branch currents add up in parallel circuits to equal
the total current, we can arrive at total current by summing 6 mA, 2
mA, and 3 mA:
The final step, of course, is to figure total resistance. This
can be done with Ohm's Law (R=E/I) in the "total" column, or with
the parallel resistance formula from individual resistances. Either
way, we'll get the same answer:
Once again, it should be apparent that the current through each
resistor is related to its resistance, given that the voltage across
all resistors is the same. Rather than being directly proportional,
the relationship here is one of inverse proportion. For example, the
current through R1 is half as much as the current through
R3, which has twice the resistance of R1.
If we were to change the supply voltage of this circuit, we find
that (surprise!) these proportional ratios do not change:
The current through R1 is still exactly twice that of
R2, despite the fact that the source voltage has changed.
The proportionality between different branch currents is strictly a
function of resistance.
Also reminiscent of voltage dividers is the fact that branch
currents are fixed proportions of the total current. Despite the
fourfold increase in supply voltage, the ratio between any branch
current and the total current remains unchanged:
For this reason a parallel circuit is often called a current
divider for its ability to proportion -- or divide -- the total
current into fractional parts. With a little bit of algebra, we can
derive a formula for determining parallel resistor current given
nothing more than total current, individual resistance, and total
resistance:
The ratio of total resistance to individual resistance is the
same ratio as individual (branch) current to total current. This is
known as the current divider formula, and it is a short-cut
method for determining branch currents in a parallel circuit when
the total current is known.
Using the original parallel circuit as an example, we can
re-calculate the branch currents using this formula, if we start by
knowing the total current and total resistance:
If you take the time to compare the two divider formulae, you'll
see that they are remarkably similar. Notice, however, that the
ratio in the voltage divider formula is Rn (individual
resistance) divided by RTotal, and how the ratio in the
current divider formula is RTotal divided by Rn:
It is quite easy to confuse these two equations, getting the
resistance ratios backwards. One way to help remember the proper
form is to keep in mind that both ratios in the voltage and current
divider equations must equal less than one. After all these are
divider equations, not multiplier equations! If the
fraction is upside-down, it will provide a ratio greater than one,
which is incorrect. Knowing that total resistance in a series
(voltage divider) circuit is always greater than any of the
individual resistances, we know that the fraction for that formula
must be Rn over RTotal. Conversely, knowing
that total resistance in a parallel (current divider) circuit is
always less then any of the individual resistances, we know that the
fraction for that formula must be RTotal over Rn.
Current divider circuits also find application in electric meter
circuits, where a fraction of a measured current is desired to be
routed through a sensitive detection device. Using the current
divider formula, the proper shunt resistor can be sized to
proportion just the right amount of current for the device in any
given instance:
- REVIEW:
- Parallel circuits proportion, or "divide," the total circuit
current among individual branch currents, the proportions being
strictly dependent upon resistances: In = ITotal
(RTotal / Rn)
Kirchhoff's Current Law (KCL)
Let's take a closer look at that last parallel example circuit:
Solving for all values of voltage and current in this circuit:
At this point, we know the value of each branch current and of
the total current in the circuit. We know that the total current in
a parallel circuit must equal the sum of the branch currents, but
there's more going on in this circuit than just that. Taking a look
at the currents at each wire junction point (node) in the circuit,
we should be able to see something else:
At each node on the negative "rail" (wire 8-7-6-5) we have
current splitting off the main flow to each successive branch
resistor. At each node on the positive "rail" (wire 1-2-3-4) we have
current merging together to form the main flow from each successive
branch resistor. This fact should be fairly obvious if you think of
the water pipe circuit analogy with every branch node acting as a
"tee" fitting, the water flow splitting or merging with the main
piping as it travels from the output of the water pump toward the
return reservoir or sump.
If we were to take a closer look at one particular "tee" node,
such as node 3, we see that the current entering the node is equal
in magnitude to the current exiting the node:
From the right and from the bottom, we have two currents entering
the wire connection labeled as node 3. To the left, we have a single
current exiting the node equal in magnitude to the sum of the two
currents entering. To refer to the plumbing analogy: so long as
there are no leaks in the piping, what flow enters the fitting must
also exit the fitting. This holds true for any node ("fitting"), no
matter how many flows are entering or exiting. Mathematically, we
can express this general relationship as such:
Mr. Kirchhoff decided to express it in a slightly different form
(though mathematically equivalent), calling it Kirchhoff's
Current Law (KCL):
Summarized in a phrase, Kirchhoff's Current Law reads as such:
"The algebraic sum of all currents entering and exiting a
node must equal zero"
That is, if we assign a mathematical sign (polarity) to each
current, denoting whether they enter (+) or exit (-) a node, we can
add them together to arrive at a total of zero, guaranteed.
Taking our example node (number 3), we can determine the
magnitude of the current exiting from the left by setting up a KCL
equation with that current as the unknown value:
The negative (-) sign on the value of 5 milliamps tells us that
the current is exiting the node, as opposed to the 2 milliamp
and 3 milliamp currents, which must were both positive (and
therefore entering the node). Whether negative or positive
denotes current entering or exiting is entirely arbitrary, so long
as they are opposite signs for opposite directions and we stay
consistent in our notation, KCL will work.
Together, Kirchhoff's Voltage and Current Laws are a formidable
pair of tools useful in analyzing electric circuits. Their
usefulness will become all the more apparent in a later chapter
("Network Analysis"), but suffice it to say that these Laws deserve
to be memorized by the electronics student every bit as much as
Ohm's Law.
- REVIEW:
- Kirchhoff's Current Law (KCL): "The algebraic sum of all
currents entering and exiting a node must equal zero"
Contributors
Contributors to this chapter are listed in chronological order of
their contributions, from most recent to first. See Appendix 2
(Contributor List) for dates and contact information.
Jason Starck (June 2000): HTML document formatting, which
led to a much better-looking second edition.
Ron LaPlante (October 1998): helped create "table" method
of series and parallel circuit analysis.
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