Potentiometer
Potentiometer
Potentiometer
Manually adjustable, variable, electrical resistor. It has a resistance element that is attached to
the circuit by three contacts, or terminals. The ends of the resistance element are attached to two
input voltage conductors of the circuit, and the third contact, attached to the output of the circuit,
is usually a movable terminal that slides across the resistance element, effectively dividing it into
two resistors. Since the position of the movable terminal determines what percentage of the input
voltage will actually be applied to the circuit, the potentiometer can be used to vary the
magnitude of the voltage; for this reason it is sometimes called a voltage divider. Typical uses of
potentiometers are in radio volume controls and television brightness controls.
2 Device used to make a precise determination of the electromotive force electromotive force,
abbr. emf, difference in electric potential, or voltage, between the terminals of a source of
electricity, e.g., a battery from which no current is being drawn. When current is drawn, the
potential difference drops below the emf value.
Potentiometer
1
Circuit diagram of a general-purpose constant-current potentiometer, showing essential features
Potentiometer techniques may also be used for current measurement, the unknown current being
sent through a known resistance and the IR drop opposed by balancing it at the voltage terminals
of the potentiometer. Here, of course, internal heating and consequent resistance change of the
current-carrying resistor (shunt) may be a critical factor in measurement accuracy; and the shunt
design may require attention to dissipation of heat resulting from its I2R power consumption. See
Current measurement, Joule's law
Potentiometer
2
read directly from the dial settings. There is usually a switching arrangement so that the
galvanometer can be quickly shifted between positions 1 and 2 to check that the current has not
drifted from its set value.
Potentiometer techniques may also be used for current measurement, the unknown current being
sent through a known resistance and the IR drop opposed by balancing it at the voltage terminals
of the potentiometer. Here, of course, internal heating and consequent resistance change of the
current-carrying resistor (shunt) may be a critical factor in measurement accuracy; and the shunt
design may require attention to dissipation of heat resulting from its I2R power consumption. See
Current measurement, Joule's law