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Transcript
EDEXCEL IGCSE / CERTIFICATE IN PHYSICS 2-3
Current and Voltage in Circuits
Edexcel IGCSE Physics pages 74 to 81
Content applying to Triple Science only is shown in
red type on the next slide and is indicated on
subsequent slides by ‘TRIPLE ONLY’
June 17th 2012
Edexcel Specification
Section 2: Electricity
c) Energy and potential difference in circuits
explain why a series or parallel circuit is more appropriate for particular
applications, including domestic lighting
understand that the current in a series circuit depends on the applied voltage
and the number and nature of other components
understand that current is the rate of flow of charge
know and use the relationship:
charge = current × time Q = I × t
know that electric current in solid metallic conductors is a flow of negatively
charged electrons
know that:
• voltage is the energy transferred per unit charge passed
• the volt is a joule per coulomb.
Red type: Triple Science Only
COVERED UNDER ELECTRIC CHARGE
Electrical conductors and insulators
An electrical conductor
is a material through
which electric current
flows easily.
All metals are
conductors.
Electrical insulators
have a very high
resistance to the flow of
electric current.
Complete the table below:
copper
rubber
steel
mercury
paper
plastic
diamond
graphite
conductor
1
insulator
2
conductor
3
conductor
insulator
4
insulator
5
insulator
6
conductor
COVERED UNDER ELECTRIC CHARGE BY TRIPLE GROUPS ONLY
Electric charge
Electric charge can be either
positive or negative.
In an atom an electron has a
negative charge that is of the
same size as the positive
charge of a proton. Neutrons
have no electric charge.
As an atom has the same
number of electrons as protons
it is uncharged.
Electric current
An electric current is the rate of flow of
electric charge.
An electric current of one ampere (A)
flows when a charge of one coulomb (C)
passes a point in an electric circuit in one
second
In metallic conductors (e.g. copper wire)
electrons carry negative charge from the
negative side of a power supply, around a
circuit and back into the positive side.
The arrow shows the
direction of electron flow.
Charge-current equation
electric charge = current x time
Q=Ixt
also: I = Q ∕ t
and: t = Q ∕ I
charge
current
time
Question 1
Calculate the charge passing through a
device when a current of 500mA flows for 3
minutes.
Q=Ixt
= 500 mA x 3 minutes
= 0.5A x 180s
charge = 90C
Question 2
Calculate the current flowing when a charge of
240C flows through a device in 80s.
I=Q÷t
current = 240 C
80s
current = 3A
Answers
Complete:
Q
I
t
60 C
2A
30 s
65 C
13 A
5s
960 C
3A
4 minutes
3C
50 mA
60 s
TRIPLE ONLY
Voltage
A battery gives electrical charge energy.
The voltage of a battery is equal to the energy in
joules provided when a charge of one coulomb
passes through the battery.
voltage = energy ÷ charge
1 volt is the same as 1 joule per coulomb
TRIPLE ONLY
Question
Calculate the voltage of a battery if it
supplies 300 joules of energy to 50C of
charge.
voltage = energy ÷ charge
= 300 J
50 C
battery voltage = 6V
TRIPLE ONLY
Answers
Complete:
Voltage
Energy
Charge
12V
480J
40C
20V
500J
25C
6V
120J
20C
230V
69kJ
300C
TRIPLE ONLY
Choose appropriate words to fill in the gaps below:
charge
Electric current is the rate of flow of electric _______.
coulombs
Electric charge is measured in _________.
energy . The amount of energy
A battery provides electrical _______
coulomb of electric charge passing is equal to
provided per _________
voltage
the ________
of the battery.
joules
mains
The _______
supply gives 230 ________
to every coulomb of
charge.
WORD SELECTION:
coulombs charge mains joules
coulomb voltage
energy
Electric circuits
An electric current will only flow if there is a
complete, unbroken electric circuit, that
contains a power supply.
A circuit diagram uses a standard set of symbols to
show how electrical components are connected
together.
Circuit symbols
cell
a cell is required to push
electrons around a circuit
battery a battery consists of two or
more cells
wire
wires should always been drawn
as straight lines
wire junction
switch a switch enables the current in
a circuit to be turned on or off
indicator
often a light bulb – this is used to
show whether or not a circuit is on
light bulb
old symbol – the indicator symbol
is now used
A
ammeter
measures electric current in
amperes (A)
V
voltmeter
measures voltage in volts (V)
fixed
resistor
a resistor is used to limit
the current in a circuit
variable
resistor
thermistor
a device whose resistance
decreases with temperature
light dependent
resistor (LDR)
a device whose
resistance decreases
with brightness
diode
a diode only allows current to flow in
one direction (indicated by the arrow)
light emitting
diode (LED)
fuse
a diode that emits light when
it allows the flow of electric
current
a fuse is designed to melt and so break
an electric circuit when too much
electric current flows
heater a device used to convert
electrical energy to heat
Electric current flow
Electric current flows
from the POSITIVE
terminal of a power
supply around a circuit to
the NEGATIVE terminal.
The longer thinner line of
the symbol for a cell is
the positive terminal.
In the circuit above the diode is
aligned so that it allows current
to flow through the radio.
Complete
symbol
component
A
ammeter
symbol
component
heater
diode
resistor
indicator
thermistor
cell
LDR
Question
Draw a circuit diagram
for the torch shown
below.
Series circuits
Circuit components are said to be connected in
series if the same electric current passes through
each of them in turn.
3A
3A
3A
3A
3A
3A
3A
The cell and the two lamps are in series with each other and
so the same electric current passes through all of them.
In a series circuit all
of the components
can be controlled by
using just one
switch.
Each component
shares the voltage of
the power supply
and so adding more
bulbs in series will
cause each bulb to
become dimmer.
Parallel circuits
The voltage across each component connected in
parallel is the same.
The voltmeter reading for
component X, V1 will be the
same as the voltmeter
reading for component Y, V2.
In a parallel circuit all
of the components
can be individually
controlled by using
separate switches.
If one light bulb
blows the other
bulbs will still carry
on working.
Currents in parallel circuits
The total current
through the whole
circuit is the sum of
the currents through
the separate
components.
5A
5A
3A
2A
3A
2A
What are the advantages of connecting two lamps
in parallel rather than in series to a power supply?
When connected in parallel:
1. the lamps are brighter than when connected in series
2. the lamps can be controlled individually with switches
3. one lamp will continue working even if the other does not
Calculate the currents measured by ammeters A1,
A2 and A3 in the circuit below.
6A
A3
A1
A2
A1 = 2A
A2 = 4A
2A
A3 = 6A
Choose appropriate words to fill in the gaps below:
connected together in series they will
When components are _________
current flowing through each of them.
all have the same _________
When components are connected in parallel to each other
voltage
they will each have the same _________.
parallel
Lamps are usually connected in __________
to each other as
switches
this allows them to be controlled individually by _________
blows the others can still continue to
and if one lamp _______
operate.
WORD SELECTION:
blows current
switches
parallel connected voltage
Online Simulations
Fifty-Fifty Game on Conductors & Insulators - by
KT - Microsoft WORD
Signal Circuit - PhET - Why do the lights turn on
in a room as soon as you flip a switch? Flip the
switch and electrons slowly creep along a wire.
The light turns on when the signal reaches it.
Charge flow with resistors in series and parallel NTNU
Circuit Construction DC Only - PhET - An
electronics kit in your computer! Build circuits
with resistors, light bulbs, batteries, and
switches. Take measurements with the realistic
ammeter and voltmeter. View the circuit as a
schematic diagram, or switch to a life-like view.
Simple parallel circuit with motor and lamps Freezeway.com
Simple parallel circuit with motor and lamps and
a short circuiting switch - Freezeway.com
Switch quiz circuit - Freezeway.com
Two way switches with a flight of stairs Freezeway.com
Bulb circuit diagram quiz - Freezeway.com
Hidden Pairs Game Circuit Pairs Quiz basic
circuit symbols with this pairs game - by eChalk
Hidden Pairs Game on Circuit Symbols - by KT Microsoft WORD
Electric Current Quizes - by KT - Microsoft
WORD
BBC KS3 Bitesize Revision:
Circuit symbols
Series and parallel circuits
Measuring current and voltage
Current in series circuits
BBC AQA GCSE Bitesize Revision:
Circuit symbols & diagrams
Series & parallel connection
Current & potential difference
Cells and circuits
Series circuits
Parallel circuits
TRIPLE ONLY
Current and Voltage in Circuits
Notes questions from pages 74 to 81
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Describe how electric current flows through a metallic conductor. (see
pages75 and 75)
(a) State the equation in words and symbol form relating electric current to
charge. (b) Calculate the charge that flows when a current of 5A flows for
40 seconds.
(a) What is meant by voltage? (b) How much energy will a 12V battery
supply to a charge of 4 coulombs?
Draw the circuit symbols for: (a) battery; (b) diode; (c) bulb; (d) fuse; (e)
variable resistor; (f) LDR; (g) thermistor. (see page 77)
List the differences between series and parallel circuit connection. Give an
advantage for each case. (see pages 77 to 79)
Why are LEDs used in preference to light bulbs?
Answer the questions on pages 80 and 81.
Verify that you can do all of the items listed in the end of chapter checklist
on page 80.
DOUBLE ONLY
Current and Voltage in Circuits
Notes questions from pages 74 to 81
1.
5.
Describe how electric current flows through a metallic conductor. (see
pages75 and 75)
(a) State the equation in words and symbol form relating electric current to
charge. (b) Calculate the charge that flows when a current of 5A flows for
40 seconds.
Draw the circuit symbols for: (a) battery; (b) diode; (c) bulb; (d) fuse; (e)
variable resistor; (f) LDR; (g) thermistor. (see page 77)
List the differences between series and parallel circuit connection. Give an
advantage for each case. (see pages 77 to 79)
Why are LEDs used in preference to light bulbs?
6.
Answer questions 1, 2, 4 and 5 on pages 80 and 81.
2.
3.
4.