Title: Electricity and Ohms Law
1Electricity and Ohms Law
2Current
- Electric current- the flow of charge. Can occur
within a material or through empty space. - Occurs most easily in materials that are good
conductors. Atoms hold on loosely to electrons.
(good insulators hold on tightly to electrons) - Generally current refers to the flow of electrons.
3Current continued
- Can also be defined as the net amount of charge
that passes through an area (such as a
cross-section of wire) per unit time. - I?Q/?t
- Symbol for current I
- Unit for current Ampere (A)
- A1C/s
4For current to flow in a circuit, it is necessary
to have
- A complete circuit
- A potential difference impressed across the
circuit - Simple circuit diagram
5Conventional current vs. electron current
- The difference is direction
- Electron current the direction that electrons
actually flow in a circuit - Conventional current direction that positive
charges would flow in a circuit. Commonly used
(though outdated) method of discussing current.
6Microscopic view of current
- Electrons in an electrically neutral wire bounce
around from atom to atom randomly - When a voltage is impressed across a wire, the
electrons are forced to move in a net direction. - As they move, they bounce off of the atoms they
move passed and drift slowly through the wire. - Usually move less than 1 cm/s
7Resistance
- The property of a material that describes how
much difficulty electrons feel or encounter as
they are forced to move in a net direction
through a material - The resistance of a wire depends mainly on 4
factors - Type of material
- Cross-sectional area
- Length of the wire
- Temperature of the wire
8Equation for resistance
- R?(L/A)
- A-cross-sectional area
- ?-resistivity of the material
- L-length of the wire
9In Summary
- Batteries and other voltage sources produce a
difference in electric pressure from one end of a
circuit to the other - This voltage causes electrons in a wire to drift
in the same net direction - Voltage is impressed across a wire, current flows
through the wire - Resistance does neither of the above and is only
a property of a material caused by the tightness
with which it holds its electrons.
10Continued
- Charge and current do not get used up or
destroyed in a circuit. The energy carried on
these charges get used up or dissipated. - The same amount of current that leaves the
battery on one end returns to the battery on the
other end of the circuit.
11Ohms law
- A relationship among voltage, current , and
resistance in basic circuitry. - Works when discussing metal conductors, but
inadequate for non-ohmic materials (ones that
have variable resistance, diodes, transistors,
etc.) - Will be used to discuss simple, series, and
parallel circuits.
12Compound Circuits
- Have to use the rules for series and parallel
circuits depending on which part of the circuit
you are studying. - Must find the equivalent resistance of the
parallel parts of the circuit before determining
the total current of the circuit.
13Solve the current, v-drop across each resistor,
and Req for the circuit.
14Solve the current, v-drop across each resistor,
and Req for the circuit.
15Solve the current, v-drop across each resistor,
and Req for the circuit.
16Power in electrical circuits
- Power is the rate at which energy is converted
from one form to another. - In the case of mechanical systems, it was the
rate that work was done and therefore the rate at
which energy of motion was converted to either
stored energy or heat. - In electrical circuits, we generally speak of the
power being equal to the rate at which electrical
energy is turned to light heat.
17Power continued
- Since voltage is the energy stored on each charge
(venergy/charge), to find the energy take
voltage x charge. (energyV x charge). - Power is energy/time. What we said above was that
energy V x charge, so - Power voltage x charge/time
- Recall that Current is the amount of charge that
flows through a certain area in a time interval
(charge/time)
18Drum roll please
- So, Power voltage x charge/time or
- Power voltage x current
- PIV
- Units of Watts
- See your circuit rules packets for some other
useful rearrangements of the power formula.
19Homework
- Page 545
- Questions 1,2,3,4,5,7,8
- Problems 5-9,11,13,15-18
- Due Tuesday
20Motors vs. Generators
- Both use the relationship between electricity and
magnetism - Motors have electrical input and mechanical
output - Generators have mechanical input and electrical
output - What is it? game
21AC versus DC
- DC stands for direct current. Electrons flow
through the entire circuit and back to the
voltage source. - Batteries produce DC
- AC stands for Alternating current
- In AC, the electrons vibrate back and forth as
the polarity ( or positive and negative
terminals) reverse direction.
22AC continued
- The common household outlet produces AC and the
polarities change about 60 times each second and
are said to have a frequency of 60 Hz. - The voltage produced by the common household
outlet is 120 V - AC is modeled by a sine wave because its
magnitude varies, growing from zero to a maximum
positive value, then reversing so it passes zero
once more to reach a maximum negative value
23AC voltage and current
- Both the voltage and the current follow this sine
wave pattern and therefore reach a maximum peak
value in the positive before returning to zero
and then dropping to a maximum negative peak
value. - Because it does this complete wave 60 times each
second, the effect of the current and voltage
dropping to a negative value is not visible or
noticeable to us, but can be viewed by using a
device called an oscilloscope. - http//www.magnet.fsu.edu/education/tutorials/java
/ac/index.html
24AC advantages over DC
- It can be sustained at high voltages over long
distances in contrast to DC, in which the
electricity loses power within about a mile of
release from the power station - It can be stepped up or stepped down with the use
of transformers (more about this later) - It can be used to power devices that require a
120V or 240 V drop.
25Household circuitry
- The electricity that enters your house runs to a
breaker box or fuse box before being routed to
the individual outlets and switches. - Why do we use breakers or fuses? When do they
blow? - Lets think about how outlets are wired in a
roomseries or parallel? - What happens to the resistance of a circuit as
more and more devices are added in parallel?
26Is the breaker box in series or parallel to the
rest of the devices on the circuit?
- What if it were in parallel?
- What about the ground?
- Most household circuits have a connection to a
live and a neutral. - The ground on a 3rd prong is to provide a path of
lower resistance for the current to run through
if a short occur and a part of the circuit
becomes electrified that shouldnt.
27Circuits wired for 240 V
- The electricity that comes into your house has
two terminal wires, one at 120V, one at -120V. - For a 120V outlet, one connection is live and the
other neutral. This produces a 120V difference
between the 2 prongs. - For some devices, such as air conditioners,
electric dryers, stoves, a higher voltage is
needed. Both prongs can be live, with one at
120, one at -120 causing a total drop of 240V
across the circuit.
28Diagram of a Breaker
29Electric shock
- Breakers and fuses are used to prevent
overheating and fires, but do little to prevent
electric shock. - GFCIs are used to help prevent severe electric
shock by shutting down at lower currents than an
breaker. - Most breakers start to open circuits between
15-20A - A shock of 0.001A can be felt, 0.005A hurts,
0.010A causes muscle spasms, 0.015 causes loss of
muscle control, and 0.070 A can be deadly,
especially is sustained for more than 1 second.
30Ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCIs)
- Outlets or plugs with test reset buttons
- Can shut down with currents as low as 5 mA
(0.005A) and do so in as little as 1 msec. - Especially important in kitchens an bathrooms
where water is present. Water lowers the
resistance of the skin and increases the
possibility of electric shock.
31How they work
- The major principal is electromagnetic induction
- Moving electric charges produce magnetic fields,
and moving magnetic fields can produce current. - GFCIs work to prevent shocks due to surfaces
being electrified that shouldnt be, often due to
a short circuit.
32See page 599 for diagram
- Normally, the magnetic field is cancelled because
of the live and neutral wires running in opposite
direction - If ground fault occurs, the neutral wire has less
current returning through it than leaves from the
live. - This coupled with the fact that AC is changing
current produces a changing magnetic field - This activates the solenoid circuit breaker and
opens the circuit.
33Black box outlet plugs-transformers
- Used to step down 120 V current to a smaller
voltage. Usually on an adapter for something that
runs off of either batteries or outlet. - Consists of 2 coils of wire around a laminated
iron core. - Primary coil has a voltage applied across it and
causes a changing magnetic field, and will create
an AC voltage of the same frequency in the second
coil
34Step up and step down
- The actual output voltage depends on the number
of coils of the output wire. - Assuming little or no magnetic flux is lost, the
output voltage can be determined with the
equation from 595. - Real transformers are usually better than 99
efficient, so this gives accurate approximations
of output voltage. - To step up the voltage, the input should have
less turns than the output.
35If your black box transformer adapter has an
input voltage of 120V and the input coil has 100
turns, how many turns must the output coil have
to produce an output voltage of 6 V?
36A very brief discussion on diodes
- Diodes are devices that only allow current to
flow in one direction in a circuit. - Can be used to change alternating current to
direct current - Light emitting diodes (LEDs) are a type of diode
that emit photons when current flows through
them. - Usually emit a specific wavelength of light as
opposed to a filament bulb which releases
multiple wavelengths.
37Pg 609
- Question 2
- Problems 30,31