VOLTMETER
VOLTMETER
VOLTMETER
Current is a flow of charge carriers. Voltage, or
electromotive force (EMF), or potential difference, is the “pressure” that
makes a current possible. Given a circuit whose resistance is constant, the
current that will flow in the circuit is directly proportional to the voltage
placed across it. Early electrical experimenters recognized that an ammeter could
be used to measure voltage since an ammeter is a form of constant-resistance circuit.
Circuit for using a microammeter to measure voltage.
If you connect an ammeter directly across a source of
voltage—a battery, say—the meter needle will deflect. In fact, a milliammeter
needle will probably be “pinned” if you do this with it, and a microammeter
might well be wrecked by the force of the needle striking the pin at the top of
the scale. For this reason, you should never connect milliammeters or
microammeters directly across voltage sources. An ammeter, perhaps with a range
of 0-10 A, might not deflect to full scale if it is placed across a battery,
but
it’s still a bad idea to do this because it will
rapidly drain the battery. Some batteries, such as automotive lead-acid cells,
can explode under these conditions. This is because all ammeters have low
internal resistance. They are designed that way deliberately.
They are meant to be connected in series with other
parts of a circuit, not right across the power supply.
But if you place a large resistor in series with an
ammeter, and then connect the ammeter across a battery or other type of power
supply, you no longer have a short circuit.
The ammeter will give an indication that is directly
proportional to the voltage of the supply. The smaller the full-scale reading
of the ammeter, the larger the resistance to get a meaningful indication on the
meter. Using a microammeter and a very large
value of the resistor in series, a voltmeter can be
devised that will draw only a little current from the source.
A voltmeter can be made to have different ranges for
the full-scale reading, by switching different values of resistance in series
with the microammeter. The internal resistance of the meter is large because the
values of the resistors are large.
The greater the supply voltage, the larger the internal resistance of the meter because the necessary series resistance
increases as the voltage increases.
It’s always
good when a voltmeter has a high internal resistance. The reason for this is
that you don’t want the meter to draw much current from the power source. This
current should go, as much as possible, towards working whatever circuit is
hooked up to the supply, and not into just getting a reading of the voltage.
Also, you might not want, or need, to have the voltmeter constantly connected
in the circuit; you might need the voltmeter for testing many different
circuits. You don’t want the behavior of the circuit to be affected the instant
you connect the voltmeter to the supply. The less current a voltmeter draws,
the less it will affect the behavior of anything that is working from the power
supply.
Another type of voltmeter uses the effect of
electrostatic deflection, rather than electromagnetic deflection. You remember
that electric fields produce forces, just as do magnetic fields. Therefore, a
pair of plates will attract or repel each other if they are charged. The electrostatic voltmeter makes use of
this effect, taking advantage of the attractive force between two plates having opposite electric charges, or having a large potential difference is a
simplified drawing of the mechanics of an electrostatic voltmeter.
The electrostatic meter draws almost no current from the power supply. The only thing between the plates is air, and the air is a nearly perfect insulator. The electrostatic meter will indicate ac as well as dc. The construction tends to be rather delicate, however, and mechanical vibration influences the reading.
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