Title: ORT21BMI
1ORT21BMI
- Topic 2--Review of electricity electrical
circuits
2Clinical context
- Remember the patient from Scenario 1?
- You want to carry out a common test of retinal
function--the electroretinogram (ERG) - Where does the ERG come from in the eye?
- What conducts it to the outside of the eye?
- What does conduct mean?
- How big a signal is it?
- How is bigness of an electrical signal
measured? - What would you do to measure it?
- How would you connect the patient to the
instrument? - What are some necessary instrument
characteristics?
3Learning Goals
- Whats electrical charge?
- Whats electrical current?
- What are the two key carriers of current?
- What is voltage?
- What is resistance?
- What is power?
- How do you determine the currents and voltages in
a simple circuit?
4A reminder...
Patients eyes brain
Instrument
You
5History
- Ancient Greeks rubbing fur on amber caused
attraction between the two substances - Static electricity
- 18th century - Luigi Galvani and Alessandro Volta
used frogs to understand electricity - Dead frogs leg twitched when touched with
dissimilar metal
6History
- Galvani and Volta agreed that frog bits touched
by dissimilar metals twitched. Why? - Galvani Intrinsic animal electricity causes
the muscles to contract - Volta The bimetallic arc somehow gives rise to
the electricity and this causes the muscular
contraction
7Notice what begins here
- Neurophysiology
- Nerves and muscles are electrical
- Electrical science
- Bimetallic junctions give rise to an electrical
potential
8Electricity Basics
- All matter consists of atoms
- Atoms are made of protons, neutrons and electrons
9Electric Charge
- Protons positive () charge
- Electrons negative (-) charge
- Neutrons no charge
- Electrons can move from one atom to another
http//www.sciencemadesimple.com/static.html
10Static Electricity
- Electrons can move by rubbing two objects
together - Static electricicty the imbalance of positive
and negative charges - Opposite charges attract
11Electrical basics
- Electricity is related to magnetism
- Recall the electromagnetic waves from optics?
- Magnetism has north and south poles, electricity
has positive and negative charges - Like magnets, opposite charges attract, like
charges repel - Benjamin Franklin first identified these 2 types
of charge as positive and negative
12Why is electricity clinically relevant?
- Retinal neurones communicate electrically
- The ERG consists of summed activities of many
retinal cells - Measuring devices used to record the ERG are all
electrical - The above movements of charge are called
currents. So - What is electrical current?
- How do you describe it?
- How do you measure it?
13Current
- Current is the flow of electric charge
- Metallic conduction electrons flow through
conductor eg. Metals - Ionic conduction charged atoms flow through
liquids eg. Saline solution - A material which doesnt conduct is an insulator
- What carries current is clinically important
14Metallic Conduction
- Electrical example--a copper wire.
- Metals are crystalline lattices where the atoms
are arranged in nice, regular structures. - Some of their electrons, when in this
configuration, are not bound to their particular
atoms - These electrons are free to move under the
influence of an applied voltage (well define
that in a minute) - Thus, in metals, it is the movement of electrons
that carries current
15Ionic Conduction
- We arent metal.
- The frogs werent metal.
- Both they and us conduct electricity (remember
nerve conduction and electrical synapses?) - How do organisms carry current?
- Ions, both positive and negative, carry current
in solutions - Which ions carry current in organisms?
16Voltage
- Electric potential difference between two points
- Current is analogous to water flowing through a
pipe - Voltage is analogous to pressure difference that
makes the water flow - By convention, current flows from a higher
voltage to a lower that is, from positive to
negative
17AC and DC sources
- Direct current (DC) is a unidirectional flow
- eg. battery
- Alternating current (AC) reverses direction
repeatedly - eg. 50 Hz, 240 V mains supply
- Next week well discuss the safety implications
of each type
18What determines the current caused by a given
voltage?
- The resistance does
- Think of water flow again--for a given pressure,
more water will flow through a fire hose than a
garden hose
19Units of Measurement
20How are they related?
- The relationship between these three quantities
is V IR - A sometimes useful mnemonic is the following
- To get one of the 3 quantities, cover it
- What remains is how to get it
- This relationship is Ohms Law
21Analogy for Ohms Law
22Analogy for Ohms Law
If flow rate stays the same and resistance
decreases, required pump pressure also decreases
http//www.allaboutcircuits.com/vol_1/chpt_2/2.htm
l
23How to connect things
- Resistors can be connected end-to-end this is a
series connection - They can also have all their ends connected
together this is a parallel connection - Complicated assemblies of resistors can be
reduced to a single equivalent resistance, whose
current or voltage (as needed) may be easily
calculated
24Series combination
Rtotal R1 R2 R3, so i1 i2 i3 iTotal
iTotal V / Rtotal V / (R1 R2 R3)
25Parallel combination
iT i1 i2 i3. iT V/RT, using the
relationship 1/RT 1/R1 1/R2 1/R3
26What about more complicated configurations?
- Use the two combination rules youve just seen
and gradually simplify the circuit until you can
calculate the quantity you want. - You may not have to completely break it down to
do so.
27Exercise
For the three resistors connected to the 9 V
battery, calculate the source current
28Exercise
Calculate the total resistance and the power
supply current for the circuit shown below
Ans R 2000 ohms I 0.003 amps
29Power
- You can do work with electricity. Work expended
over time is called power. - A common way electrical power is demonstrated is
via heating, either intentionally or by accident. - The latter is an extremely common way to start
fires. - Electrical power may be described as P VI or
P I2R - Notice that square of the current above
- If something happens to increase current, things
can get hot quickly!
30Power, contd
- Think about a defective extension lead, with
corroded contacts, and a lot of things plugged
into it. - What would the current be, compared to a good
cord? - What would the resistance be?
- Which cord would have more power dissipated in
it? - How is this power dissipated?
- Whats the risk?
- Next week, electrical safety.
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