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Electrical Current Detecting electrical charge • Electroscope: an instrument to detect electrical charge Electrical Current • Electrical current: the movement of electric charges in a single direction • Measured in amperes • One ampere = 6250 million electrons moving past a single point every second Voltage difference • Voltage difference: electrical charge flows from a higher voltage to a lower voltage which keeps the electrical flow going • Measured in volts Electrical Circuit • Electrical circuit: a closed path that electric current flows through • Batteries: keep the voltage difference maintained in the circuit in order to keep the current flowing Dry-Cell Batteries • Dry-cell batteries: 2 electrodes surrounded by an electrolyte • Electrode: an electric semi-conductor with a carbon rod that is positive and a zinc part that is negative • Electrolyte: a moist paste containing several chemicals • Use more batteries to create a higher voltage • Examples: cell phone battery, Duracell batteries, iPod batteries Dry-cell Batteries Wet-cell batteries • Wet-cell batteries: contains 2 connected metal plates in a conducting solution. The solution transfers electrons which transfers electric charge • Examples: car, truck, boat batteries Lead-acid Batteries • Lead-acid batteries: wet-cell batteries made up of lead plates and sulfuric acid solution • Examples: car batteries Resistance • Resistance: the tendency for a material to oppose the flow of electrons which changes electrical energy into thermal energy or light energy • Insulators = more resistance • Conductors = less resistance • Measured in ohms (Ω) • Copper: used in household wiring because it produces less heat Resistance • Factors that increase resistance of a wire: • Temperature: as the temperature of the wire increases, the resistance increases • Length: as the length of the wire increases, the resistance increases • Diameter: as the diameter of the wire increases, the resistance increases Ohm’s Law • Ohm’s Law: the current in a circuit equals the voltage difference divided by the resistance • I = current • R = resistance • V = volts • I = V/R • R = V/I • V = IR Electrical energy and circuits • Circuits include: 1. A source of voltage difference (battery or outlet) 2. A device that uses electrical energy (light bulb) 3. Conductors that connect the device to the voltage difference (wires) Circuits in Series • Circuits in a Series: the current only has one circuit loop to flow through Open Circuits • Open circuit: the parts in the series are wired one after the other, if one part is disconnected, no current flows through the circuit • Example: Christmas lights Parallel Circuit • Parallel circuit: contains 2 or more branches for current to flow though • The current can flow through both or one of the branches at a time • Example: household circuits Fuses and circuit breakers • Fuses: If the current becomes too high, a small piece of metal melts and causes a break in the circuit, stopping the flow of current • Circuit breaker: a device that prevents a circuit from overheating and causing a fire Electrical Power • Electrical Power: the rate at which electrical energy is converted to another form of energy • Equation: P = I x V • I = P/V • V = P/I • Measured in Kilowatts because watts are small units of power Electrical Energy • Electrical Energy: the power company charges for the electrical energy used in your home and is measured in kilowatt hours (kWh) • Electrical energy equation: E = P x t • P = E/t • t = E/P