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Transcript
12.4
Electrical Potential Difference
Work and Charges
§  In moving a charge through an electric field you must apply
a force.
§  The force is applied over a distance, therefore work is done.
§  If you do work on an object you give it energy. In this case,
electric potential energy.
Electric Potential Energy
§  To push a positive test charge closer to a positively charged
sphere, we will expend energy to overcome electrical repulsion.
Work is done in pushing the charge against the electric field.
§  The energy a charge has due to its location in an electric field is
called electrical potential energy.
§  If the charge is released, it will accelerate away from the sphere
and electrical potential energy transforms into kinetic energy.
Electric Potential Energy
§  If we push a single charge against an electric field, we
do a certain amount of work. If we push two charges
against the same field, we do twice as much work.
§  Two charges in the same location in an electric field
will have twice the electrical potential energy as one;
ten charges will have ten times the potential energy.
§  It is convenient when working with electricity to
consider the electrical potential energy per charge.
Electric Potential
§  The electrical potential energy per charge is the total
electrical potential energy divided by the amount of charge.
§  The concept of electrical potential energy per charge has the
name, electric potential.
§  The SI unit of measurement for electric potential is the volt,
named after the Italian physicist Allesandro Volta.
§  The symbol for volt is V.
§  Potential energy is measured in joules and charge is
measured in coulombs
Electric Potential
Formula:
Electric Potential = Electric Potential Energy / Charge
V=W/Q
• 
• 
• 
Electric Potential (Volts)
Electric Potential Energy (Joules)
Charge (Coulombs)
Electric Potential
V=W/Q
§  A potential of 1 volt equals 1 joule of energy per 1 coulomb of
charge.
Electric Potential
What is the difference between electric potential
and electrical potential energy?
Electric potential is the potential energy per charge.
Electrical potential energy is the energy a charge
has due to its location in an electric field.
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #1
A potential difference of 10 Volts exists between two points, A
and B, within an electric field. What is the magnitude of charge
that requires 0.02 joules of work to move it from A to B?
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #2
How much electrical energy is required to move 4µC charge
through a potential difference of 36 Volts?
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #3
If 1 joule of work is required to move 1 coulomb of charge
between two points in an electric field, the potential difference
between the two is:
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #4
In an electric field, 0.90 joules of work is required to bring 0.45
coulombs of charge from point A to point B. What is the electric
potential between A and B?
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #5 - Thinker
If there were twice as much charge on one of
the objects:
a.  Would the electrical potential energy
(Joules) be the same or would it be twice
as great?
b.  Would the electric potential (Volts) be the
same or would it be twice as great?
•  Twice as much charge would cause the object to have twice as much
electrical potential energy, because it would have taken twice as
much work to bring the object to that location.
•  The electric potential would be the same, because the electric
potential is total electrical potential energy divided by total charge
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #6
The potential energy (Joules) of a compressed spring and
the potential energy of a charged object both depend:
a.  only on the work done on them.
b.  only on their locations in their respective fields.
c.  on their locations in their respective fields and on
the work done on them.
d.  on their kinetic energies exceeding their potential
energies.
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #7
Electric potential (volts) is related to electrical potential
energy (Joules) as:
a.  the two terms are different names for the same
concept.
b.  electric potential is the ratio of electrical potential
energy per charge.
c.  both are measured using the units of coulomb.
d.  both are measured using only the units of joules.
Electric Potential – Assessment Questions
Example #8
A proton is moved through a potential difference of 10 volts in
an electric field. How much work was required to move this
proton?