A Maxwell bridge is a modification to a
Wheatstone bridge
A Wheatstone bridge is an electrical circuit used to measure an unknown electrical resistance by balancing two legs of a bridge circuit, one leg of which includes the unknown component. The primary benefit of the circuit is its ability to provid ...
used to measure an unknown
inductance
Inductance is the tendency of an electrical conductor to oppose a change in the electric current flowing through it. The flow of electric current creates a magnetic field around the conductor. The field strength depends on the magnitude of the ...
(usually of low Q value) in terms of calibrated
resistance and inductance or resistance and
capacitance
Capacitance is the capability of a material object or device to store electric charge. It is measured by the change in charge in response to a difference in electric potential, expressed as the ratio of those quantities. Commonly recognized are ...
. When the calibrated components are a parallel resistor and capacitor, the bridge is known as a Maxwell-Wien bridge. It is named for
James C. Maxwell, who first described it in 1873.
It uses the principle that the positive phase angle of an inductive impedance can be compensated by the negative phase angle of a capacitive impedance when put in the opposite arm and the circuit is at resonance; i.e., no potential difference across the detector (an AC
voltmeter
A voltmeter is an instrument used for measuring electric potential difference between two points in an electric circuit. It is connected in parallel. It usually has a high resistance so that it takes negligible current from the circuit.
Ana ...
or
ammeter
An ammeter (abbreviation of ''Ampere meter'') is an instrument used to measure the current in a circuit. Electric currents are measured in amperes (A), hence the name. For direct measurement, the ammeter is connected in series with the circuit ...
)) and hence no current flowing through it. The unknown inductance then becomes known in terms of this capacitance.
With reference to the picture, in a typical application
and
are known fixed entities, and
and
are known variable entities.
and
are adjusted until the bridge is balanced.
and
can then be calculated based on the values of the other components:
:
To avoid the difficulties associated with determining the precise value of a variable capacitance, sometimes a fixed-value capacitor will be installed and more than one resistor will be made variable. It cannot be used for the measurement of high
Q values. It is also unsuited for the coils with low Q values, less than one, because of balance convergence problem. Its use is limited to the measurement of low Q values from 1 to 10.
:
The frequency of the AC current used to assess the unknown inductor should match the frequency of the circuit the inductor will be used in - the impedance
and therefore the assigned inductance of the component varies with frequency. For ideal inductors, this relationship is linear, so that the inductance value
at an arbitrary frequency can be calculated from the inductance value measured at some reference frequency. Unfortunately, for real components, this
relationship is not linear, and using a derived or calculated value in place of a measured one can lead to serious inaccuracies.
A practical issue in construction of the bridge is mutual inductance: two inductors in propinquity will give rise to
mutual induction
Inductance is the tendency of an electrical conductor to oppose a change in the electric current flowing through it. The flow of electric current creates a magnetic field around the conductor. The field strength depends on the magnitude of the ...
: when the magnetic
field of one intersects the coil of the other, it will reinforce the magnetic field in that other coil, and vice versa, distorting the inductance of both
coils. To minimize mutual inductance, orient the inductors with their axes perpendicular to each other, and separate them as far as is practical. Similarly,
the nearby presence of electric motors, chokes and transformers (like that in the power supply for the bridge!) may induce mutual inductance in the circuit components, so locate the circuit remotely from any of these.
The frequency dependence of inductance values gives rise to other constraints on this type of bridge: the calibration frequency must be well below the
lesser of the self-resonance frequency of the inductor and the self-resonance frequency of the capacitor, Fr < min(L
srf,C
srf)/10. Before those limits are approached, the ESR of the capacitor will likely have significant effect, and have to be explicitly modeled.
For ferromagnetic core inductors, there are additional constraints. There is a minimum magnetization current required to magnetize the core of an inductor,
so the current in the inductor branches of the circuit must exceed the minimum, but must not be so great as to saturate the core of either inductor.
The additional complexity of using a Maxwell-Wien bridge over simpler bridge types is warranted in circumstances where either the mutual inductance between the load and the known bridge entities, or stray electromagnetic interference, distorts the measurement results. The capacitive reactance in the bridge will exactly oppose the inductive reactance of the load when the bridge is balanced, allowing the load's resistance and reactance to be reliably determined.
See also
*
Wien bridge
The Wien bridge is a type of bridge circuit that was developed by Max Wien in 1891. The bridge consists of four resistors and two capacitors.
At the time of the Wien bridge's invention, bridge circuits were a common way of measuring component v ...
, a similar circuit for calibrating unknown capacitance
*
Anderson's bridge
In electronics, Anderson's bridge is a bridge circuit used to measure the self-inductance of the coil. It enables measurement of inductance by utilizing other circuit components like resistors and capacitors.
Anderson's bridge was invented by Ale ...
, a modification of Maxwell's bridge that accurately measures capacitance
*
Bridge circuit
A bridge circuit is a topology of electrical circuitry in which two circuit branches (usually in parallel with each other) are "bridged" by a third branch connected between the first two branches at some intermediate point along them. The bridge ...
Further reading
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{{Bridge circuits
Electrical meters
Bridge circuits
Measuring instruments
James Clerk Maxwell
Impedance measurements