Title: Electric Circuits
1Electric Circuits
2Battery and a Bulb--A Simple Circuit
- A circuit is a complete path from the positive
terminal at the top of the battery to the
negative terminal at the bottom. - Electrons flow through devices in DC current.
3Electric Circuits
- A gap in currents is provided to be open and
closed to either cutoff or allow electron flow. - Devices are commonly connected in a circuit one
of two ways. - In series they form a single pathway for electron
flow between the terminals of the battery,
generator, or wall socket. - In parallel they form branches, each of which is
a separate path for the flow of electrons.
4Series Circuits
- A series circuit in which devices are arranged so
that charge flows through each in turn. If one
part of the circuit should break the current will
stop. - A break anywhere in the path results in an open
circuit and the flow of electrons ceases.
5Series Connection Characteristics.
- Electric current has but a single pathway through
the circuit. - Total resistance to current is the sum of the
individual resistance along the circuit path. - The current in the circuit is numerically equal
to the voltage supplied by the source divided by
the total resistance of the circuit. - The potential difference across each device is
proportional to resistance. - The total voltage impressed across a series
circuit divides among the individual electrical
devises in the circuit so that the sum of the
voltage drops across each individual device is
equal to the total voltage.
6Parallel Circuits
- A parallel circuit is an electrical circuit in
which devices are connected to the same two
points of a circuit so that any single device
completes the circuit independently of the
others.
7Parallel Circuit Characteristics
- Each device connects the same two parts of the
circuit - Total current divides among the parallel branches
- Total current equals sum of the currents in its
parallel branches - As the number of parallel branches increase,
overall resistance decreases.
8Schematic Designs
- Simple diagrams of electrical circuit elements
are schematic diagrams
9Schematic Designs
- Combining resistors in a compound circuit
- The equivalent resistance is the value of the
single resistor that would comprise the same load
to the battery of power source. - The equivalent resistance for a pair of equal
resistors in parallel is half the value of either
resistor. - Becomes much more complicated when more resistors
added
10Parallel Circuits and Overloading
- Electricity is usually fed into a home by way of
two lead wires, which are low in resistance
(110-120 volts) - Lines that carry more than a safe amount of
current is overloaded - To prevent overloading, fuses are connected in
series along the supply line - Circuits may be protected by circuit breakers,
which are magnets or bi-metallic strips to open
the switch.
11Homework
- Chapt 35 RQ 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 12, 13, 15 T
E 1, 5, 6, 7, 8
12Magnetism
- Magnetic Poles
- Magnets exert force on one another
- Regions of magnetic poles produce magnetic forces
- The end that points northward is called the
north-seeking pole and vice-versa - Each magnet has both poles
- Likes poles repel opposite poles attract
- Electric charges can be isolated, magnets cannot
13Magnetic Fields
- The space around a magnet in which a magnetic
force is exerted, is filled with a magnetic field - The shape of the field is revealed by magnetic
field lines
14The Nature of a Magnetic Field
- A magnetic field is produced by the motion of
electric charge - The magnet as a whole is stationary while the
electrons are in constant motion - Every spinning electron is a tiny magnet
15Magnetic Domains
- The magnetic field of individual iron atoms is so
strong that interactions among adjacent iron
atoms cause large clusters of them to line up
with each other. These clusters of aligned atoms
are called magnetic domains - The difference between a piece of ordinary iron
and an iron magnet is alignment of domains - Permanent magnets are made by simple placing
pieces of iron or certain iron alloys in strong
magnetic fields
16Electric Currents and Magnetic Fields
- A moving charge produces a magnetic field, many
of these with an electric current - Magnetic field lines about a current-carrying
wire crowd up when the wire is bent into a loop - A piece of iron placed in a current-carrying coil
of wire is an electromagnet
17Magnetic Forces on Moving Charged Particles
- A charged particle at rest will not interact with
a static magnetic field - A charged particle that moves in a magnetic
field, the magnetic character of its motion
becomes evident, experiencing a deflected force - The force is greatest when the particle moves in
a direction perpendicular to the magnetic field
lines - At other angles the force is less
- It becomes zero when the particle moves parallel
to the field lines
18Magnetic Forces on Current-Carrying Wires
- Current-carrying wires respond to deflected
force, moving the wire - If the direction of the current is reversed, the
deflected force acts in the opposite direction - The force is maximum when the current is
perpendicular to the magnetic field lines
19Meters to Motors
- A current-indicating instrument is called a
galvanometer - A galvanometer may be calibrated to measure
current in amperes called an ammeter - Ammeters calibrated to measure electric potential
(volts) is a voltmeter - If the design of the galvanometer is modified,
you have an electric motor - Large motors are usually made with an
electromagnet that is energized by a power source
with many loops of wire that are wound about an
iron cylinder, called an armature which then
rotates when energized with electric current
20The Earths Magnetic Field
- The discrepancy between the orientation of a
compass and true north is called the magnetic
declination - The magnetic field of the earth is not stable
21Homework
- Chapt 36 RQ 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 11, 13, 14, 17, 19,
20 T E 2, 5, 8
22Uses of Magnetism
- Electromagnetic Induction
- The production of voltage depends only on the
relative motion between the conductor and the
magnetic field - The amount of voltage induced depends on how
quickly the magnetic field lines are traversed by
the wire (the quicker the more voltage) - The greater number of loops of wire that move in
a magnetic field, the greater the induced voltage
and the greater the current in the wire
23Electromagnetic Induction
- It is more difficult to push the magnet into a
coil with more loops because the magnetic field
of each current loop resists the motion of the
magnet. - The phenomena of inducing voltage by changing the
magnetic field around a conductor is called
electromagnetic induction. - Faradays Law states the induced voltage in a
coil is proportional to the product of the number
of loops and the rate at which the magnetic field
changes within those loops.
24Generators and Alternating Current
- If a magnet is plunged in and out of a coil of
wire, the induced voltage alternates in
direction. The frequency of the induced
alternating voltage is equal to the frequency of
the changing magnetic field within the loop. When
a magnet enters the coil the field strength
increases and vice versa - Rather than moving the magnet, if the coil is
rotated, it makes a generator, which is a motor
running backwards. The voltage produced is
alternating the N.A. standard changes in
magnitude and direction during 60 complete cycles
per second or 60 hertz - Power plants are made up of huge coils or many
loops that are wrapped around an iron core to
make a armature and is rotated by a turbine - Electricity is a form of energy that must have a
source
25Motor and Generator Comparison
- A motor converts electrical energy into
mechanical energy, a generator converts
mechanical energy into electrical energy. - Moving charges experience a force that is
perpendicular to both their motion and the
magnetic field that they traverse. - The deflected wire is the motor effect, and the
law of induction is the generator effect
26Transformers
- A transformer allows equal frequency of energy
flow through two different currents - (primary voltage/number of primary turns)
(secondary voltage/number of secondary turns - Power into primary power out of secondary
(voltage current)primary (voltagecurrent)seco
ndary
27Power Transmission
- Almost all power today is AC and the voltage is
transferred in different levels - Power created at 6000 V then raised to 120000 V
- Power is reduced when it comes to user
28Induction of Electric and Magnetic Fields
- An electric field is induced in any region of
space in which a magnetic field is changing with
time. - The magnitude of the induced electrical field is
proportional to the rate at which the magnetic
field changes. - The direction of the induced electric field is at
right angles to the changing magnetic field - A magnetic field is induced in any region of
space in which an electric field is changing with
time. - The magnitude of the induced magnetic field is
proportional to the rate at which the electric
field changes. - The direction of the induced magnetic field is at
right angles to the changing electric field
29Electromagnetic Waves
- Shake a charged object to and fro and you produce
electromagnetic waves. - An electromagnetic wave is composed of vibrating
electric and magnetic fields that regenerate each
other
30Homework
- Chapt 37 RQ 3, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11, 13, 15, 16,
18 T E 1, 4, 6, 8