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AS – Current Electricity Textbook chapters 4-5 Chapter 4 – Back to Basics • • • • • • • Charge Current pd energy power resistance resistivity What is “electric charge”? • This is a surprisingly difficult question to answer! – It’s like being asked “what is mass?” or “what is time?” – Electric charge is a fundamental property of matter • It was first encountered through static electricity: – Friction between two, usually non-conducting, materials sometimes results in attractive or repulsive forces (suggesting two “flavours”) – They are then said to be charged, and the logic of how the charge was brought into being suggests the law of charges: – Like charges repel – Unlike charges attract • and we note a third feature: – The force decreases in strength as separation increases Charge on the move • Sparks and other effects suggest that charge can move. – and does so to neutralise accumulated charge • The earth can act as an infinite source or sink for charge • Conductors allow charges to flow through them and insulators do not, seeming to leave the charge “static”. • Conductors can only become charged if they are insulated from their surroundings, e.g., suspended by nylon threads. Conductors and insulators • Generally, most metals are good conductors and most non-metals are not. • An electric cable makes use of both types of material. Metal wires to carry electricity Plastic insulation to isolate metal wires • There is a third category, semi-conductors, which are also very useful – More charge carriers released if energy in Electric current • An electric current is a flow of electric charge. • Current is measured in Amperes (Amps, A) • In metals, the charges that flow are negatively charged electrons. • Some electrons in metals are essentially “free” from their parent atoms, so they can move within the metal. – This makes metals good conductors. – Insulators do not have many free charges The Nature of Charge • So, It is known that in solids, negative charges are mobile and associated with discrete particles (electrons) of a particular mass and charge (-1.6 × 10-19 coulombs). • Except in fluids, the positive charges remain static. • Charge is hard to pin down and measure. • Current is easier to get a grip on – it has various properties and can exert forces (the motor effect) which allow a base unit, (the ampère), to be defined. Charge and Current • The charge flowing in a given time (in seconds) is then defined in turn as Q It charge (C) current (A) time (s) Q so I t • One coulomb is the charge flowing past a point in one second in a current of 1 amp. – How many electrons do you need to have a charge of 1C? Measuring current AMMETER An ideal ammeter does not affect the circuit, no energy is transferred to it: it has zero resistance • Ammeters need to go in the circuit so the current can flow in and out of them. • To just indicate the flow of current without measuring it we can use an indicator light. Current and Charge • A graph of current against time is needed if the current flow is not constant. The area under the graph between two moments in time represents the charge that has passed. Find the total charge delivered from a car battery if the variation in current supplied is given by the adjacent graph. Charge Carriers • Each charge carrier takes a time, t, to cross a certain length of conductor, at a typical speed v. Length therefore is vt. • The conductor volume is Area of Cross-section, A, × its length or Avt • There are n charge carriers per unit volume of the conductor, each carrying charge q. In total there is a moving charge of: n × Avt × q • Current is I = total charge / time = nAvtq /t = nAvq Charge Carriers: I = nAvq • n is the number of charge carriers per unit volume of the conductor • v is an average drift speed of the carriers. • A is the cross-sectional area of the conductor • q is the charge carried by each carrier (often this is 1.6 × 10-19 C because the carrier is an electron) Of these, A and q can be measured as can the current flowing in a given situation. The charge carrier density, n, has to be estimated, for example, 1 free electron per atom of copper in a wire. In this way the drift speed of the carriers can be estimated. Worked Example • A copper wire of diameter 1.4 mm connects to a filament of a light bulb of diameter 0.02 mm. A current of 0.42 A flows through both of the wires. • Copper has 8 x 1028 free electrons/m3, tungsten 3.4 x 1028 /m3. For copper, v = I/(nAq) =0.42/(8x1028 × π × (0.07 × 10-3)2 × 1.6 × 10-19) = For tungsten,v 2.13 × 10-5 m s-1 or 0.02 mm s-1 = 0.42 / (3.4 × 1028 × π × (0.01 x 10-3)2 × 1.6 × 10-19) = 0.246 m s-1 or 246 mm s-1 In tungsten there are fewer charge carriers /m3, moving faster not slower, colliding more vigorously with the lattice atoms, losing energy as heat in the conductor. So, although the electric signal travels at close to the speed of light, the charge carriersare going much more slowly How can this be? Electric current • Where do the electrons come from? – In a circuit, all the wires and components are full of electrons, so as soon as a power supply is connected a current starts flowing – No time delay with long wires! Remember the sign convention: – Remember bicycle chain model SQ p.47 When you pedal, all links move at once Real Current flow Current will therefore not be an orderly flow of electrons more a drifting superimposed on the randomly moving “electron gas” Think of a swarm of midges being carried sideways by an air current. How fast? • Coloured ions in solution in filter paper show a very slow progress in between two electrodes. • Calculations using I = nAvq assuming each metal atom releases one electron give speeds of a few millimetres per second for normal currents. • Think of a vast sluggish river rather than a fast white-water rafting stream. Both can deliver a similar volume of water per second despite different speeds. Speeds to remember • Signal speed – speed of light • Thermal speed – 100 m/s • Drift speed – 1mm/s • Make sure you understand this! Electrical Energy • Electricity is useful because it can be easily converted into other types of energy. • A battery or power supply gives electrical energy to the electrons in a circuit. • Other circuit components then convert this to different forms of energy. Potential Difference (“Voltage”) • The p.d. between two points is a measure of how much electrical potential is transferred to or from the charges as they pass between those points. • The p.d. of a power supply is a measure of how much electrical potential is transferred to or from the charges as they travel between its terminals – This can be thought of as how hard it “pushes” charge – so, for any circuit, a larger voltage means a larger current flowing What is electrical potential? • “Potential” is the electrical potential energy per unit charge – so if more charge flows between two points more energy is transferred, but the p.d. between those points is fixed. – Unit of potential? – J/C (or V) • Note: charges are not “used up” – Energy is transferred – The bigger the p.d., the more energy is transferred Potential difference and energy • Potential difference is the work done (or energy transferred) per unit charge W V Q work (J) charge (C) pd (V) • Separating charges requires an input of energy. – Force is needed to overcome the attraction of opposite charges and work has to be done to move them. – Pushing a number of like charges together against their natural repulsion also requires an active force and work to be done. Measuring voltage • To measure the voltage between two points we connect a voltmeter in parallel across those two points Here we are measuring the voltage across the resistor R An ideal voltmeter does not affect the circuit, no energy passes through it: it has infinite resistance Energy, work done and power • Work is done when energy is transferred from one form to another – Electrical to...? • W QV , Q It so W ItV work done (J) W ItV IV • P t t power (W) SQ p. 49 Examples 1 Resistance • Resistance is the opposition to current flow displayed by components – for a fixed voltage, the larger the resistance, the smaller the current • Resistance of connecting wires is usually so small it is ignored • Resistors dissipating energy get hot! – e.g. lamp filament Resistance • Resistance is caused by collisions between the free charges and the lattice of atoms which makes up the conductor • Each collision transfers energy to the atoms of material – material heats up • A high current means more collisions – resistor gets hotter Resistance model Resistance • Resistance is a measure of the opposition to current flow • We define the resistance of a device as the voltage needed to push a given current V through it voltage (V) R resistance (W) (Ohms) I current (A) • When a p.d. of 1V causes a current of 1A to flow through a device, its resistance is 1 W Voltage, Resistance & Current • We have resistance (W) V R I voltage (V) current (A) • So for a given circuit: – What happens to the current if we increase the voltage of the power supply? – What happens to the current if we increase the resistance of the components? Examples • If a lamp has a current of 3A when there is a p.d. of 12V across it, what is the resistance of the lamp? • What is the current through a 100W resistor with a p.d. of 5V across it? • A real ammeter has a resistance of 0.5W. What will the p.d drop across it be when a current of 5A is flowing? How can we investigate resistance? • Draw a circuit which would allow us to measure the resistance of a component. – What quantities do we need to measure? – How will we use them? – What factors do we need to control? device under test V • R I How can we investigate resistance? • So measure V and I, calculate R • By adjusting the variable resistor we can change V and see how I changes – What might you expect? – It depends what the device is... device under test V ? I Let’s measure some things • We can use a data logger to speed things up • Is there a better way of varying the p.d.? – What is the limitation of this method: device under test A better way to vary p.d. • A potential divider • The full range of the supply pd is accessible, down to zero A • Obtain IV curves for – a resistor – a lamp – a thermistor – a diode Vbattery V I-V Graph for a wire/resistor Flash simulation • For a wire, we find: – Current is proportional to voltage • We find the resistance by calculating V/I for a point(s) on the line • Proportional means I increases at the same rate as V, so R is a constant value – A special case – Also true for resistors, but not for all components I I2 I1 V1 V2 V R I V1 V2 R I1 I 2 V Ohm’s Law • Metals and resistors usually obey Ohm’s Law: “The current through a conductor is proportional to the voltage across it, provided the temperature remains constant” • Not generally true, note the bold type • Take care if a high current leads to heating: I No longer obeys Ohm’s Law V Why does resistance increase with temperature? Non-Ohmic Conductors • Lots of components don’t follow Ohm’s Law • e.g. Filament bulb – The filament is designed to get hot and glow – Its resistance increases with temperature Same behaviour for reversed current Thermistor Flash simulation • A semiconductor device • Resistance decreases as it gets hotter • (Extra energy releases more charge carriers) Resistance and Temperature • The resistance of a metal increases with temperature – positive ions vibrate more and scatter the conduction electrons so they do not pass as easily – This is a positive temperature coefficient • The resistance of an intrinsic semi-conductor decreases with increasing temperature because the number of charge carriers increases – The % change is much more than for a metal – Can be used in a temperature sensor Diodes • A “one way valve” for electricity. – useful to protect circuitry, covert AC to DC • Low resistance to +V (after a small threshold ~0.6V) • High resistance to –V (up to a maximum voltage) • Can be light-emitting when conducting (LED) 0.6V Resistivity • What factors determine the resistance of an object? – material – size – dimensions • Different-sized or -shaped lumps of the same material will have different resistances • Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to characterise a material with a single measure? – resistivity Resistivity • resistance of a conductor is – proportional to its length, L – inversely proportional to its cross-sectional area, A – proportional to the resistivity, r, a material constant resistance (W) • R rL , so r RA area (m2) A L resistivity (Wm) length (m) experiment Superconductors • Research exercise: – What are they? – Why does superconductivity happen? – What is special about superconducting magnets? – Describe and explain two uses of superconductors Superconductivity • A superconductor has zero resistivity at and below a critical temperature (TC) that is material dependent. • A current passing through a superconductor experiences no drop in p.d., and the current has no heating effect. • High temperature superconductors have TC above 77 K (–196°C the boiling point of liquid nitrogen) • Used in: – high power electromagnets (MRI scanner, CERN) generating strong magnetic fields, – power cables that do not waste energy Circuit symbols • You’ve just got to learn them! Chapter 5 – DC circuits • Kirchhoff’s Rules (1845) are two simple statements of conservation laws which allow us to do circuit calculations. Gustav Kirchhoff (1824-87) Kirchhoff’s current rule • At any junction in a circuit the total current leaving the junction equals the total current entering the junction – i.e. charge is conserved – So components in series must have the same current flowing through them Electric current • When a circuit with a battery is competed, the battery “pushes” the charges around. • Electric current is not “used up” as electrons flow around a circuit. – The current is the same through all components in series circuit – All ammeters read the same: – (note A connect in series) Current in a parallel circuit • The total current through the battery is equal to the sum of the currents through each parallel branch I battery I1 I 2 I 3 • The smallest current flows through the branch with the highest resistance. Ibattery I1 I2 I3 Kirchhoff’s voltage rule • The net voltage drop around any closed loop path is zero. – i.e. energy is conserved – For multiple components in series, the total pd across all the components is equal to the sum of the potential differences across each component Kirchhoff’s voltage rule • The net voltage drop around any closed loop path is zero. – i.e. energy is conserved – The pd across components in parallel is the same Try SQs on p. 60 Voltage in a series circuit • The energy transferred to the charge by the battery = the energy dissipated by all the components in the circuit Vbattery V1 V2 V3 • The largest resistance has the largest voltage across it (most energy transferred) Vbattery V1 V2 – If all resistances are equal, the battery voltage is divided equally V3 Voltage in a parallel circuit • All components connected to a battery in parallel have the same voltage across them. Vbattery V1 V2 V3 • The current through each component is the same as if the other components weren’t there. Vbattery A Resistors in series • If you have resistors in series, the current has to flow through them all – so the total resistance is larger than any resistor on its own... VT V1 V2 V3 ... IRT IR1 IR2 IR3 ... VT R1 R2 R3 RT R1 R2 R3 ... Resistors in parallel • If you have resistors in parallel, the current splits so some flows through each resistance – so the total resistance is smaller than any resistor on its own... I T I1 I 2 R1 R2 V V V RT R1 R2 1 1 1 ... RT R1 R2 Resistance is “getting in the way” • The heating effect of a current is due to charge carriers repeatedly colliding with the positive ions of the component. • After losing Ek the charge carrier is accelerated again by the p.d. across the material – until it collides again • There is a net transfer of energy from the current to the positive ions as a result, i.e. “the current does work against the resistance”. Resistance is hot work • The pd in a mains circuit is constant and we can choose the resistance of a component, so in terms of V and R, I = V/R P = IV = V2/R or (I2R, but varying R changes I) • Highest rate of energy transfer occurs when R is lowest! (but higher than the resistance of the mains cables – why?) • Energy transferred over time = I2Rt or V2t/R Try SQs on p. 63 • Rate of heat transfer is P = I2R or V2/R • the hotter a component is, the faster it will lose heat to the surroundings. • maintaining a temperature is a balancing act; when rate of heat produced = rate of heat loss, the temperature remains constant • Both AC and DC have the same heating effect. Resistance is futile, Mr Bond Model Resistance Real Cells have resistance of their own • At the same time that the chemical reaction in a cell, or the electromagnetic interactions in a generator are producing a pd, they also oppose the flow of current • as soon as the current starts to flow, it experiences resistance within the cell or generator itself. • Internal Resistance emf • The electromotive force [ emf, ε] of a source is the energy per unit charge produced by the source. • ε = Energy /Charge = E/Q Terminal pd • The PD across the terminals of the source is the electrical energy per unit charge delivered by the source when it is in a circuit. • Terminal pd is less than the emf, some “volts get lost” overcoming the internal resistance of the source. The algebra ... • ε = Ir +IR • IR is the terminal PD measured across the load resistor, V • So Ir is the PD lost inside the cell overcoming internal resistance • and Ir = ε - V • r = (ε – V)/I • “The internal resistance of a source is the loss of PD per unit current in the source when current passes through the source” Measuring internal resistance • As we vary the circuit resistance we can measure how current and terminal pd change • (The lamp limits the current) Measuring internal resistance e IR Ir e V Ir V rI e ( y mx c) • So a plot of V against I should give a straight line • Gradient is -r • y intercept is e Calculating internal resistance • If we know two values of I and V we can calculate r: V1 e I1r V2 e I 2 r so V1 V2 e I1r (e I 2 r ) r ( I 2 I1 ) V1 V2 and r I 2 I1 Try SQs on p. 66 When to worry about internal resistance? • When answering A level questions! • If R>>r, then internal resistance becomes negligible and terminal pd emf • Safest to include it, unless the question says you can ignore it Cells in series • Emfs add • Internal resistances add • Same current flows • Watch out for reversed cells! Cells in parallel • For identical cells: – I/n flows through each – So lost pd is Ir/n for each – So terminal pd V=e-Ir/n • so the source has an emf of e and internal resistance of r/n • Cells in parallel can deliver more current than a single cell Arrays of cells • e.g. solar panels • Connect in rows to give the pd required • Connect rows in parallel to provide a suitable current. Try SQs on p. 69 Circuits with diodes • Simple Model: a silicon diode – once it starts conducting in forward bias – maintains a pd across its terminals of 0.6V – whatever current passes through it – in reverse bias it has infinite resistance. SQ p. 69 The Potential Divider • Essentially a pair of resistors, used to split the applied potential difference as desired. V0 V0 I RT R1 R2 R1 V0 V1 IR1 R1 R2 R2 V0 V2 IR2 R1 R2 The Potential Divider • Varies resistance from 0 to a maximum • Allows the rest of the circuit maximum current down to a minimum value, but not zero current • varies pd at the slider from 0 to maximum • can feed the rest of the circuit any pd/current from 0 to maximum • always draws current through itself Variable resistor Potential Divider The Potential Divider Variable PD Fixed PD Sensor Circuits: using LDRs Light increases Vout Light decreases Vout Uses of potential dividers SQ p. 71