Roberval Balance
The Roberval Balance is used in Top-Loading Electronic
Balances.The Roberval Balance is a mechanism invented by the
17th century French mathematician Gilles Personne de Roberval.
The sample position on the pan does not affect the weight
measurement. The following describes the mechanism of this
Roberval Balance, which should be called the basic principle of
top-loading balances.
What Would Happen If the Roberval Balance Did Not Exist?
“With the balance in, pans are fixed in place on the
beam”.
By the principle of leverage, balances of this
structure require the length from the fulcrum to the
weight and the length up to the sample to be the
same. If the position where the sample is placed on a
pan is changed, as shown by the dotted line in the
figure A, this balance becomes out-of-balance even
if the placed sample is the same. This means that
this mechanism cannot be used as a balance since
the balance point shifts depending on where the
sample is placed. For this reason, the Roberval
Balance has a parallelogram frame structure with
freely moving sides, as shown in figure B. If pans are
placed on its vertical beams and the sample and
weight are placed on top of these pans, they will be
balanced regardless of where the sample and weight
are placed if their masses are the same. The sample
may be placed anywhere on the pan.
This is the basic structure of the Roberval Balance. In top-loading electronic balances, further
improvements have been made to this basic structure to achieve superior accuracy (i.e. little
eccentric error).