Voltage Divider Calculator
Enter 3 of 4 values (input voltage, R1, R2, output voltage) to calculate the 4th value using the voltage divider formula.
Voltage dividers constitute fundamental circuits using two or more series resistors to produce output voltage as fraction of input voltage. Operating on the principle that voltage drop across each resistor in a series string is proportional to its resistance value, these configurations find applications in sensor interfaces, reference voltage generation, signal conditioning, and level shifting across different logic families. The fundamental equation Vout = Vin × (R2/(R1+R2)) demonstrates that dividers only step down voltage, never amplify, with the ratio always yielding values between 0 and 1 for passive resistive networks.
Resistor Ratios and Loading Effects: The idealized divider equation assumes infinite load impedance, but real circuits draw current from the output node, creating parallel resistance that modifies the divider ratio and reduces output voltage. Divider output impedance equals , with a 10kΩ-10kΩ divider presenting 5kΩ impedance. Connecting 10kΩ load reduces effective R2 to 6.67kΩ, changing ratio from 0.5 to 0.4 and dropping output 20%. Minimizing loading requires divider impedance significantly lower than load (typically 10:1 ratio), enabling microcontroller ADC inputs with 10MΩ impedance to load 10kΩ dividers with only 0.1% error.
Temperature Effects and Precision Resistors: Resistor tolerance and temperature coefficient directly impact divider accuracy, with standard ±5% resistors creating worst-case errors approaching ±10% when tolerances stack unfavorably. Temperature-induced resistance changes compound errors—standard carbon film resistors exhibit 100-500ppm/°C coefficients causing significant drift. Precision applications demand matched resistor pairs with tight tolerances: ±1% metal film reduces error to ±2%, while bulk metal foil resistors with ±0.01% tolerance and <2ppm/°C coefficients achieve accuracies limited by measurement instrumentation rather than component variation for critical reference applications.
Power Dissipation and Thévenin Equivalent: Total power dissipation equals P = V²/(R1+R2), with power distributing proportionally to resistance values across divider resistors. High-voltage dividers or low-resistance designs require careful power analysis—a 1000V divider using 1MΩ total resistance dissipates 1W continuous power demanding appropriate ratings. High-voltage probe applications require resistors rated for applied voltage (typically 5× safety margin) with adequate creepage distances per IEC 61010 to prevent corona discharge and arc-over, critical for safety-critical measurement applications maintaining electrical isolation and preventing failures.
Frequency Response and Compensation: Parasitic capacitances in resistors and circuit layout form RC low-pass filters attenuating high-frequency signals, with output nodes seeing 10-100pF from oscilloscope inputs or ADC circuits limiting bandwidth. Frequency compensation maintains constant attenuation by adding capacitors in parallel with divider resistors, matching RC time constants where C1/C2 = R2/R1. This technique enables oscilloscope probes rated for hundreds of megahertz despite megohm resistances. The -3dB cutoff frequency occurs at f = 1/(2πRC), critical for AC applications requiring flat frequency response across measurement bandwidth.
Standards Reference: IEC 61010 specifies safety requirements for electrical equipment including creepage and clearance distances for high-voltage dividers. IEEE standards establish measurement accuracy requirements for precision instrumentation. Component specifications follow IEC 60063 for standard resistor values (E12, E24, E96 series) and tolerances, ensuring consistent designs across manufacturers and applications requiring documented component characteristics.
Related Calculators
You might also need these calculators
Referenced Standards & Guidelines
Calculations comply with the following authoritative sources
All formulas and calculations are based on peer-reviewed standards and official engineering guidelines
Usage Examples
Real-world scenarios showing how to use this calculator effectively