Ampere. Indicates rate at which electrical current or electrons flow. 1 ampere = 6.25 x 1018 ... Change in wattage reflects change in voltage and ampere ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation
Indicates rate at which electrical current or electrons flow
1 ampere 6.25 x 1018 electron per second
Most modalities have current flow designated much lower
Milliamperes or microamperes
Coulomb
Number of electrons passing by a point in one second
1 ampere is defined as the movement of 1 coulomb
5 Basic Principle of Electricity
Voltage
Electromotive force resulting from accumulation of electrons at one point in a circuit
Measurement of the difference in electrons between two points in question
Amount of work needed to move 1 Coulomb
High volt vs low volt generators
6 Basic Principle of Electricity
Electrons can only move in a current if there is an easy pathway to move along
Conductors
Insulators
Number of amps flowing in a given conductor dependent on voltage and conductive characteristics
Resistance to Electron Flow Ohms
Ohms Law
Current flow voltage/resistance
Analogy
7 Electron Flow Analogy
Volt
Amperes
Ohm (properties of conductor)
Pump
Gallons
Resistance (length and distance of pipe)
Amount of energy produced by flowing water gallons/unit of time and pressure created in pipe Electrical energy produced is function of amperes and voltage 8 Basic Principle of Electricity
Impedance -- Form a resistance to AC Currents
Measured in Ohms
Inductance
Capacitance
Frequency dependent resistance
Cell membranes act as these
High vs low frequency capacitance
9 Basic Principle of Electricity
Watts
Watts Voltage x amperes
Power of the electrical current
The electrical power needed to produce current flow of 1 amp at a pressure of 1 volt
Change in wattage reflects change in voltage and ampere
10 Basic Principles of Electricity Types of Current
Direct Current (Galvanic Current)
Continuous flow of electrons in one direction
Negative to positive pole
Polarity remains constant
Square Wave
11 Basic Principles of Electricity
Direct Current
Alternating Current
Flow changes direction
Constantly changing polarity
Negative to positive and then changing direction with polarity
Closer Look at AC Current
Peak value
Peak-to-peak value
Cycle duration
frequency
12 Basic Principles of Electricity
Pulsed Currents
Unidirectional or bi-directional flow
Usually 3 or more pulses grouped together
Pulses are interrupted
3 Types of Waveforms
Monophasic
Biphasic
Polyphasic (Russian Current)
13 A Closer Look at the Electrical Pulse
Pulse Duration
Distance wave covers on horizontal axis
Length of time current is flowing in 1 cycle
Phase Duration
Important
Monophasic Uninterupted
Phase duration pulse duration
Biphasic Uninterupted
Pulse duration combined phase durations
14 A Closer Look at the Electrical Pulse
Pulse Charge
Measure of electrons delivered in pulse
Phase Charge
How do you know pulse charge is large enough to overcome capacitance of tissue?
Pulsed Currents
Interpulse interval
Intrapulse Interval
Pulse Period
15 A Closer Look at the Electrical Pulse
Pulse Amplitude
Reflects intensity of current
Highest point in each phase
Synonymous w/ voltage and current intensity
16 Strength-Duration Curve
Nonlinear relationship between current duration and current intensity
Shorter duration need higher intensities
Nerve and muscle differ greatly in firing threshold
17 A Closer Look at the Electrical Pulse
Adjusting Amplitude and Phase Duration to Increase Pulse Charge to Elicit Desired Response
Rheobase
Minimum amplitude needed to depolarize nerve fiber
Chronaxie
Minimum phase duration required to depolarize a nerve when peak amplitude is twice rheobase
18 A Closer Look at the Electrical Pulse
Pulse Frequency
Pulsed vs continuous AC current
Units
Each pulse represents a rise and fall in amplitude
Inverse relationship between frequency and capacitive tissue resistance
19 A Closer Look at the Electrical Pulse
Pulse Rise Time
Pulse Decay Time
Which waveforms may produce a rapid rise time?
20 Current Modulation
Continuous
Amplitude remains same
Interrupted
On- and off-time
Monophasic and biphasic pulsed currents
Burst
Short duration on and offs repeated in a cycle
Mon-, bi- and polyphasic waveforms
Ramping
Gradual rise or fall
21 Electric Circuit Types
Closed vs Open Circuit
Basic Components of Electrical Circuits
Power Source
Conducting Medium
Group of Components driven by electron flow
Series Circuit
Parallel Circuit
22 Electrical Circuit Types
Series Circuit
Current can only flow along one path
Components end to end
Amperes same at any point
Resistance Total R1 R2 R3
Decrease in voltage at each component
Vt VD1 VD2 VD3
23 Electrical Circuit Types
Parallel Circuit
Current can flow along 2 or more pathways
Components side by side by connected end to end
Each resistor receives same voltage
Vt V1 V2 V3
Current chooses path of least resistance
24 Summary of Series and Parallel Circuits
Series has higher resistance and lower current flow
Parallel has lower resistance and higher current flow
PowerShow.com is a leading presentation sharing website. It has millions of presentations already uploaded and available with 1,000s more being uploaded by its users every day. Whatever your area of interest, here you’ll be able to find and view presentations you’ll love and possibly download. And, best of all, it is completely free and easy to use.
You might even have a presentation you’d like to share with others. If so, just upload it to PowerShow.com. We’ll convert it to an HTML5 slideshow that includes all the media types you’ve already added: audio, video, music, pictures, animations and transition effects. Then you can share it with your target audience as well as PowerShow.com’s millions of monthly visitors. And, again, it’s all free.
About the Developers
PowerShow.com is brought to you by CrystalGraphics, the award-winning developer and market-leading publisher of rich-media enhancement products for presentations. Our product offerings include millions of PowerPoint templates, diagrams, animated 3D characters and more.