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Chapter 23 Electric Current

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Title: Chapter 23 Electric Current


1
Chapter 23Electric Current
2
Current
Water flows from the reservoir of higher pressure
to the reservoir of lower pressure flow stops
when the pressure difference ceases.
Water continues to flow because a difference in
pressure is maintained with the pump.
3
Electric Current
  • Just as water current is flow of water molecules,
    electric current is the flow of electric charge.
  • In circuits, electrons make up the flow of
    charge.

ON
OFF
4
Demo Ammeter
  • Ammeter measures electrical current.

Current increases as the voltage increases. Due
to charge conservation, same current into and out
of light bulb.
Light Bulb
CURRENT
Power Supply
Ammeter readings always the same.
(adjustable voltage)
Galvanometer is an ammeter with both positive
negative
5
Voltage Sources
  • Charges flow only when they are pushed or
    driven. A sustained current requires a suitable
    pumping device to provide a difference in
    electric potentiala voltage.

Aluminum
Lemon
Copper
Simple Chemical Battery
Simple Mechanical Generator
6
Chemical Battery
  • Batteries separate positive and negative charges
    by using a chemical reaction.
  • Chemical potential energy is converted into
    electrical energy.

7
Rechargeable Battery
  • Eventually the batterys chemicals are consumed
    unless the reaction can be reversed by passing a
    current into the battery.

Automobile battery is recharged while the
gasoline engine is running since the engine
powers a generator that produces a recharging
current.
Starting the car
Engine running
8
Electrical Resistance
  • Current depends not only on the voltage but also
    on the electrical resistance of the conductor.
  • The wider the wire is, the less the resistance.
  • A short wire offers less resistance than a long
    wire.

More water flows through a thick hose than
through a thin one connected to a city's water
system (same water pressure).
Jumper cables use thick wires so as to minimize
the electrical resistance.
9
Jacobs Ladder
  • Electrical resistance through air is greater for
    a larger gap.

Biblical Jacobs Ladder
Physics Jacobs Ladder
10
Ohms Law
  • Relation between current, voltage, and resistance
    is Ohms law,
  • (Current)
  • Ampere is unit of current symbol is A
  • Volt is unit of voltage symbol is V
  • Ohm is unit of resistance symbol is ?

(Voltage)
(Resistance)
11
Lab Ohms Law
  • Measuring voltage, current, and resistance in
    simple circuits to verify Ohms law.

Ammeter
Galvanometer
Battery
Resistor
12
Demo Resistance of Water
  • Pure water has very high resistance impurities,
    such as salt, lower resistance.

Light Bulb
When salt dissolves the sodium and chlorine atoms
are charged (ions). These mobile charges carry
the current in the water.
CURRENT
Power Supply
Salty Water
13
Nervous System
  • Nervous systems in animals use electrical
    currents to signal the contraction and relaxation
    of muscles.

Frog leg jumps when electrical current passes
through it.
14
Conduction in Human Heart
  • The most important electrical signal in our body
    is the periodic signal that contracts and relaxes
    our heart muscle to pump blood.
  • Without a constant flow of blood the brain can
    suffer permanent damage.

SA
AV
15
Conduction in Human Heart
  • The normal electrical conduction in the heart
    allows the impulse that is generated by the
    sinoatrial (SA) node of the heart to be
    propagated to (and stimulate) the myocardium
    (muscle of the heart).
  • When the myocardium is stimulated, it contracts,
    pumping blood in the body.
  • As the electrical activity is spreading
    throughout the atria, it travels via specialized
    pathways, known as internodal tracts, from the SA
    node to the Atrioventricular (AV) node.
  • The AV node functions as a critical delay in the
    conduction system. Without this delay, the atria
    and ventricles will contract at the same time,
    and blood won't flow effectively from the atria
    to the ventricles.

SA
AV
16
Electric Shock
  • The damaging effects of shock are the result of
    current passing through the body.

Effects of Electric Shock on Human Body
Current (A) Effect
0.001 Can be felt
0.005 Is painful
0.010 Causes involuntary muscle contractions (spasms)
0.015 Causes loss of muscle control
0.070 If through the heart, serious disruption probably fatal if current lasts for more than 1 s
From Ohm's law, current depends on the voltage
and on electrical resistance. When dry, skins
resistance around 100,000 ?. Resistance drops as
low as 100 ? when wet and salty.
17
Check Yourself
  • If your resistance is 100,000 ?, what is the
    current passing through you when you touch an
    electric socket (120 volts)?
  • What if your resistance is only 100 ??

18
Direct Alternating Current
  • Direct current (DC) is current that flows in only
    one direction.
  • Alternating current (AC) is current that flows
    back and forth with alternating direction.

19
DC vs. AC
  • Easy to produce small DC currents using
    batteries, which also have low voltages.
  • For major power lines, less ohmic heating if high
    voltage AC current is used instead of DC.

20
Electrons in Conductors
  • Electrons in a wire are in constant, rapid, but
    random motion.
  • With direct current the electrons slowly drift
    down the wire.
  • With alternating current the electrons slosh back
    and forth.

Without Voltage
With Voltage
21
Demo Resistance Temperature
Liquid Nitrogen
Resistance in a material goes down when the
material is cooled because the electrons dont
bump into atoms often.
CURRENT
Battery
With Voltage Cold
Without Voltage
With Voltage
Ammeter
Current increases when wire cooled
22
Ohmic Heating
  • Flowing electrons strike atoms in a conductor,
    heating the material.

Toaster
23
Rear Window Defogger
  • Ohmic heating evaporates fog on car window.

24
Demo Ohmic Cooking
  • An electric current running through a hot dog
    generates enough heat to cook it.

25
Electric Power
  • Power is rate at which energy is delivered.
  • Power (Voltage) x (Current)
  • For example,
  • (100 Watts) (120 Volts) x ( 5/6 Ampere)

Line voltage in the US is 120 Volts. In Europe
voltage is 240 Volts.
26
Check Yourself
  • A kilowatt is 1000 watts, and a kilowatt-hour is
    the amount of energy consumed in one hour at the
    rate of 1 kilowatt.
  • If electric energy costs 5 cents per
    kilowatt-hour, what does it cost to operate a
    100-watt light bulb for 10 hours?
  • What does it cost to run a 1200 watt microwave
    for 10 minutes?

27
Lab Simple Electric Circuits
  • Combining circuit elements (battery, wires,
    bulbs, resistors, etc.) in different arrangements
    can give different results.
  • Can predict results by tracing current and
    voltage differences.

These three circuits are equivalent
28
Series Circuit
  • Same current passes through each element.

Disconnect one of the bulbs and the circuit is
broken (other bulbs go out).
29
Parallel Circuit
Same voltage on each bulb current splits through
each branch.
Disconnect one of the bulbs and the other bulbs
stay light with same brightness.
30
Check Yourself
  • How do the brightnesses of the identical light
    bulbs compare?
  • Which bulb draws the most current?
  • What happens if bulb A is unscrewed?
  • What happens if bulb C is unscrewed?

31
Overloading a Circuit
  • More appliances added to a parallel circuit, the
    more current flows.
  • A large current can cause significant ohmic
    heating in the wires, which is a fire hazard.
  • Protect against overloading a circuit by adding a
    fuse.

32
Fuses Circuit Breakers
  • Fuse is designed to melt (due to ohmic heating)
    when current is too large.
  • Circuit breaker does same job without needing
    replacement flip the switch to reconnect.

Fuse
Circuit Breaker
33
Check Yourself
  • If a 1200 watt hair dryer is connected to a 120
    Volt line, how much current will it draw?
  • How many hairdryers can you operate before
    blowing a 30 amp fuse?
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