Measuring small resistance change

Thread Starter

Dritech

Joined Sep 21, 2011
901
Hi all,

When measuring small changes in resistance, which from the two methods shown below is the most accurate/reliable in practice?

- Method 1 is the kelvin four wire measurement technique
- Method 2 is the Wheatstone bridge

I personally think method 1 is the most accurate/reliable since in method 2 all resistance must be perfectly equal and it is more prone to temperature changes etc. Also, if the leads to the sensor are long, it will affect the accuracy of the measurement.

What are the advantages of Method 2? Why is Method 2 more used than Method 1?

Any kind of help would be highly appreciated.

 

GopherT

Joined Nov 23, 2012
8,009
Hi all,

When measuring small changes in resistance, which from the two methods shown below is the most accurate/reliable in practice?

- Method 1 is the kelvin four wire measurement technique
- Method 2 is the Wheatstone bridge

I personally think method 1 is the most accurate/reliable since in method 2 all resistance must be perfectly equal and it is more prone to temperature changes etc. Also, if the leads to the sensor are long, it will affect the accuracy of the measurement.

What are the advantages of Method 2? Why is Method 2 more used than Method 1?

Any kind of help would be highly appreciated.

I would disagree about the 4 wire technique being less common. Most every quality bench meter has 4-wire ohm measurement capability.

Not so common as a teaching method but very common as a practiced technique.
 

GopherT

Joined Nov 23, 2012
8,009
Also, in a true Wheatstone bridge, you have a galvanometer across the bridge, not a voltage measurement. Any current flow is then detected. A load cell / strain gauge is simply measuring the voltage across the bridge.

Finally, a 6-wire strain gauge setup accounts for voltage changes with temp if the sense wires go to the ref of an instrument amplifier and maintain constant voltage.
 

ErnieM

Joined Apr 24, 2011
8,377
What method to choose depends on what you are doing?

Why are you measuring resistance? Is this some sensor or just validation parts before nsertion? What value resistor, since as the resistance becomes much greater than the wiring resistance kelvin is less and less necessary.

Do you want to know if it changed or how much it changed?
 

Thread Starter

Dritech

Joined Sep 21, 2011
901
Thanks for the replies.

I would disagree about the 4 wire technique being less common. Most every quality bench meter has 4-wire ohm measurement capability.

Not so common as a teaching method but very common as a practiced technique.
So what are the advantages (if any) of using a bridge when compared to 4 wire technique?
 
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