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Resistors and Resistivity©98 Experiment 9 Objective: To learn to build simple electrical circuits, to read electrical meters and to verify Ohm’s Law and calculate resistivity. DISCUSSION: Electrical circuits behave like an enclosed plumbing system, such as the circulatory system of the body. There is an “electron pump” which is analogous to the heart in its function. This pump may be a dry cell, battery or generator. There is a fluid of electronic charges (either electrons or holes – the absence of an electron), analogous to the blood. There are wires or conductors, analogous to the veins or arteries. It is important to remember that the wires always have electrons in them and that the battery or generator is not a source of electrons. Rather the battery or generator simply pushes the electronic charges (electrons or holes) already in the wires around the circuit. Electrical meters are devices that measure certain characteristics of this flow of electrons. The ammeter is an instrument that measures the current – flow of electric charges. The unit of this measure if the ampere (SI symbol, A), which represents the flow of one coulomb per second by a give point in the circuit. The ammeter has a very low resistance to the current in order that, when it is placed in the circuit, it does not impede the current. The voltmeter is an instrument that, loosely speaking measures the drop in electrical ‘pressure’ between any two points in a circuit. More exactly, it measures the energy per unit charge that is dissipated or generated between these two points in a circuit. The unit of this measure is the volt, which is equivalent to a loss or gain in electrical potential energy of one joule per coulomb. The voltmeter has a very high resistance to the flow of electricity in order that, when it straddles two points in a circuit, a new path for the current is not created. Voltages are generated by such things as batteries and electrical generators. Voltages are lost or dissipated by such things as wires, motors, electrical lights, and all other devices used to convert electrical energy into energy of some other form. Ohm’s law states that the voltage V dissipated or lost between two points in a conducting medium is proportional to the current I between those two points. That is, V I or V IR (1) 9-1 where R is a constant of proportionality. This constant is known as the resistance of the medium between the points in question. Ohm’s law states, in other words, that the resistance between the points is constant. (Actually, Ohm’s law is not exactly true in the case of many materials, and in some cases it fails completely. These are disingenuously described as non-ohmic materials.) Every material has a resistivity, ρ, associated with its chemical composition, its size and shape and its temperature. It is related to the material’s resistance by its length and cross section area: AR (2) where A is the area, R is the resistance and ℓ is the length. For a cylindrical shape, this becomes r 2 R (3) where r is the radius of the cylinder. It is this property of resistivity that determines if a material would make a good resistor. If the material’s resistivity is very high, the material can be used as an insulator. EXERCISES: Resistance and length: A 1. Choose a color of PlayDoh. Record this color. 2. Divide the Play-Doh in half. Divide one of these -18 +18 halves in half again. 3. Flatten the two small pieces of Play-Doh into thick pancakes, covering the ends of the copper Figure 1: Wiring the Play-Doh pancakes. pieces. 4. Connect the positive lead of the power supply to the positive jack on the ammeter. See Figure 1. 5. Connect the negative jack of the ammeter to one of the copper pieces under a pancake. 6. Connect the negative lead of the power supply to the other piece of copper under the other pancake. 7. Using the other half of the Play-Doh, roll a 30 cm long cylinder. Try to make it as uniform in shape as possible. 8. Measure and record the length and radius of this cylinder. 9-2 9. Complete the circuit by placing the ends of the cylinder on the pancakes. You might have to slightly flatten the end of the cylinder to make good contact. See Figure 2. 10. Connect the positive lead A of the voltmeter to a copper piece and lay it V sideways on the positive end of the cylinder. -18 +18 11. Connect the negative lead of the voltmeter to the other copper piece and lay it sideways on the negative end of the Figure 2: Measuring the voltage and current of the complete circuit. cylinder. 12. Wait until the readings stabilize and then record the voltage and current. 13. Unhook the voltmeter and remove the cylinder. 14. Cut 5 cm off the cylinder and record the new length. 15. Reconnect the circuit and record the new voltage and current. 16. Repeat steps 14 and 15 until your left with a 5 cm piece of cylinder. Resistance and color: Repeat the previous experiment with two additional colors of Play-Doh. Analysis: 1. Using Eq. 1, calculate the resistance for each voltage and current pair of readings. 2. Calculate the area of each cylinder. 3. Calculate the value of for each length. A 4. For each color, graph Resistance vs. . A 5. Find the slope of each of these graphs. This value is the resistivity of that color of Play-Doh. Questions: 1. As the length of the cylinder shortened, what happen to the resistance? Why do you think this happened? 2. Are the resistivities of the different colors the same? Why do you think they are the same/different? 3. What so you think would happened to the resistance if we had changed the radius instead of the length of the cylinders? 9-3 Resistors – Data Sheet Play-Doh Color: Cylinder Radius: Cylinder Area: Length Voltage (V) 0.30 m 0.25 m 0.20 m 0.15 m 0.10 m 0.05 m Play-Doh Color: Cylinder Radius: Cylinder Area: Length Voltage (V) 0.30 m 0.25 m 0.20 m 0.15 m 0.10 m 0.05 m Play-Doh Color: Cylinder Radius: Cylinder Area: Length Voltage (V) 0.30 m 0.25 m 0.20 m 0.15 m 0.10 m 0.05 m (m) (m2) Current (A) Resistance (Ω) Length/Area Resistance (Ω) Length/Area Resistance (Ω) Length/Area (m) (m2) Current (A) (m) (m2) Current (A) 9-4 Resistors – Data Sheet (con’t) 9-5 Resistors – Data Sheet (con’t) 9-6 Resistors – Data Sheet (con’t) 9-7 9-8