An
ammeter shunt allows the measurement of
current values too large to be directly measured by a particular ammeter. In this case, a separate shunt, a
resistor of very low but accurately known
resistance, is placed in parallel with a
voltmeter, so that virtually all of the current to be measured will flow through the shunt (provided that the very high internal resistance of the voltmeter takes such a low portion of the current that it can be considered negligible). The resistance is chosen so that the resultant
voltage drop is measurable but low enough not to disrupt the
circuit. The voltage across the shunt is proportional to the current flowing through it, and so the measured voltage can be scaled to directly display the current value. Shunts are rated by maximum current and voltage drop at that current. For example, a 500 A, 75 mV shunt would have a resistance of , a maximum allowable current of 500
amps and at that current the voltage drop would be 75
millivolts. By convention, most shunts are designed to drop 50 mV, 75 mV or 100 mV when operating at their full rated current and most ammeters consist of a shunt and a voltmeter with full-scale deflections of 50, 75, or 100 mV. All shunts have a derating factor for continuous (more than 2 minutes) use, 66% being the most common, so the example shunt should not be operated above 330 A (and 50 mV drop) longer than that. This limitation is due to thermal limits at which a shunt will no longer operate correctly. For
manganin, a common shunt material, at 80 °C thermal drift begins to occur, at 120 °C thermal drift is a significant problem where error, depending on the design of the shunt, can be several percent and at 140 °C the manganin alloy becomes permanently damaged due to
annealing resulting in the resistance value drifting up or down. If the current being measured is also at a high voltage potential this voltage will be present in the connecting leads too and in the reading instrument itself. Where the circuit is grounded (earthed) on one side, a current measuring shunt can be inserted either in the ungrounded conductor or in the grounded conductor. A shunt in the ungrounded conductor must be insulated for the full circuit voltage to ground; the measuring instrument must be inherently isolated from ground or must include a resistive voltage divider or an
isolation amplifier between the relatively high common-mode voltage and lower voltages inside the instrument. A shunt in the grounded conductor may not detect leakage current that bypasses the shunt, but it will not experience high common-mode voltage to ground. The load is removed from a direct path to ground, which may create problems for control circuitry, result in unwanted emissions, or both. Image:Low side current shunt.svg|Low-side insertion can eliminate common-mode voltage, but if there are other paths to ground, the shunt will not measure this leakage current. Image:High side current shunt diagram.svg|High-side insertion allows measurement of all current, including leakage current, but guarantees common-mode voltage. Image:isolation amp current shunt.gif|
Isolated amplifiers resolve all the difficulties and limitations with high- or low-side current shunt measurements. ==See also==