Title: PHY 184
1PHY 184
Title Electric Current and Resistance
2Announcements
- Homework Set 4 is due tomorrow at 800 am.
- Midterm 1 will take place in class Thursday,
February 8 - Will cover Chapters 16 - 19
- Homework Set 1 - 4
- You may bring one 8.5 x 11 inch sheet of
equations, front and back, prepared any way you
prefer - Bring a calculator
- Bring a No. 2 pencil
- Bring your MSU student ID card
- We will post Midterm 1 as Corrections Set 1 after
the exam - You can re-do all the problems in the Exam
- You will receive 30 credit for the problems you
missed - To get credit, you must do all the problems in
Corrections Set 1, not just the ones you missed
3Review
- Electric current i is the net charge passing a
given point in a given time - The ampere is abbreviated as A and is given by
- The current per unit area flowing through a
conductor is the current density J - If the current is constant and perpendicular to a
surface, then and we can write an expression for
the magnitude of the current density
4Electron Drift Velocity
- In a conductor that is not carrying current, the
conduction electrons move randomly. (thermal
motion) - When current flows through the conductor, the
electrons have an additional coherent motion.
(drift velocity, vd ) - The magnitude of the velocity of random thermal
motion is on the order of 106 m/s while the
magnitude of the drift velocity is on the order
of 10-4 m/s - We can relate the current density J to the drift
velocity vd of the moving electrons.
5Electron Drift Velocity (2)
- Consider a conductor with cross sectional area A
and electric field E. - Suppose that there are n electrons per unit
volume. - The negatively charged electrons will drift in a
direction opposite to the electric field. - We assume that all the electrons have the same
drift velocity vd and that the current density J
is uniform. - In a time interval dt, each electron moves a
distance vddt . - The volume that will pass through area A is then
Avd dt the number of electrons is dn nAvd dt .
6Electron Drift Velocity (3)
- Each electron has charge e so that the charge dq
that flows through the area A in time dt is - So the current is
- and the current density is
- The current density and the drift velocity are
parallel vectors, pointing in opposite
directions. As vectors,
7Electron Drift Velocity (4)
- Consider a wire carrying a current
- The physical current carriers are negatively
charged electrons. - These electrons are moving to the left in this
drawing. - However, the electric field, current density and
current are directed to the right.
Comments Electrons are negative charges! On top
of the coherent motion the electrons have random
(thermal) motion.
8Clicker Question
- The figure shows positive charge carriers that
- drift at a speed vd to the left. In what
- directions are J and E?
- A) J and E point to the right
- B) J points to the left, E to the right
- C) J points to the right, E to the left
- D) J and E point to the left
9Example - current through a wire (1)
- The current density in a cylindrical wire of
radius R2.0 mm is uniform across a cross section
of the wire and has the value 2.0 105 A/m2. What
is the current i through the outer portion of the
wire between radial distances R/2 and R? - J current per unit area di / dA
R
10Example - current through a wire (1)
- The current density in a cylindrical wire of
radius R2.0 mm is uniform across a cross section
of the wire and has the value 2.0 105 A/m2. What
is the current i through the outer portion of the
wire between radial distances R/2 and R? - J current per unit area di / dA
R
Area A (outer portion)
Current through A
11Resistance and Resistivity
- Some materials conduct electricity better than
others. - If we apply a given voltage across a conductor,
we get a large current. - If we apply the same voltage across an insulator,
we get very little current (ideal none). - The property of a material that describes its
ability to conduct electric currents is called
the resistivity, ? - The property of a particular device or object
that describes it ability to conduct electric
currents is called the resistance, R - Resistivity is a property of the material
resistance is a property of a particular object
made from that material.
12Resistance and Resistivity (2)
- If we apply an electric potential difference V
across a conductor and measure the resulting
current i in the conductor, we define the
resistance R of that conductor as - The unit of resistance is volt per ampere.
- In honor of George Simon Ohm (1789-1854)
resistance has been given the unit ohm, ?
13Resistance and Resistivity (3)
- We will assume that the resistance of the device
is uniform for all directions of the current
e.g., uniform metals. - The resistance R of a conductor depends on the
material from which the conductor is constructed
as well as the geometry of the conductor - First we discuss the effects of the material and
then we will discuss the effects of geometry on
resistance.
14Resistivity
- The conducting properties of a material are
characterized in terms of its resistivity. - We define the resistivity, ?, of a material by
the ratio - The units of resistivity are
E magnitude of the applied field J magnitude of
the current density
15Typical Resistivities
- The resistivities of some representative
conductors at 20 C are listed in the table below - As you can see, typical values for the
resistivity of metals used in wires are on the
order of 10-8??m.
(mW-cm)
16Resistance
- Knowing the resistivity of the material, we can
then calculate the resistance of a conductor
given its geometry. Derivation - Consider a homogeneous wire of length L and
constant cross sectional area A. - the resistance is
17Resistance and resistivity
18Clicker Question
- You have three cylindrical copper conductors.
Rank them according to the current through them,
the greatest first, when the same potential
difference V is placed across their lengths.
A a, b, c
B a and c tie, then b
C b, a, c
D a and b tie, then c
19Clicker Question
- You have three cylindrical copper conductors.
Rank them according to the current through them,
the greatest first, when the same potential
difference V is placed across their lengths.
B a and c tie, then b
D a and b tie, then c
20Example Resistance of a Copper Wire
- Standard wires that electricians put into
residential housing have fairly low resistance. - Question
- What is the resistance of a length of 100 m of
standard 12-gauge copper wire, typically used in
household wiring for electrical outlets? - Answer
- The American Wire Gauge (AWG) size convention
specifies wire cross sectional area on a
logarithmic scale. - A lower gauge number corresponds to a thicker
wire. - Every reduction by 3 gauges doubles the
cross-sectional area.
21Example Resistance of a Copper Wire (2)
- The formula to convert from the AWG size to the
wire diameter is - So a 12-gauge copper wire has a diameter of 2.05
mm - Its cross sectional area is then
- Look up the resistivity of copper in the table
22Clicker Question
- A rectangular block of iron has dimensions 2.0cm
x 2.0 cm x 10cm. A potential difference is to be
applied to the block between parallel sides. What
is the ratio of the resistances R(1)/R(2) of the
block for the two arrangements (1) and (2). -
- A)
-
- B)
- C)
-
(1)
(2)
23Clicker Question
- A rectangular block of iron has dimensions 2.0cm
x 2.0 cm x 10cm. A potential difference is to be
applied to the block between parallel sides. What
is the ratio of the resistances R(1)/R(2) of the
block for the two arrangements (1) and (2). -
- A)
-
-
-
-
(1)
(2)
24Resistors
- In many electronics applications one needs a
range of resistances in various parts of the
circuits. - For this purpose one can use commerciallyavailabl
e resistors. - Resistors are commonly made from carbon,inside a
plastic cover with two wires sticking out at the
two ends for electrical connection. - The value of the resistance is indicated by four
color-bands on the plastic capsule. - The first two bands are numbers for the mantissa,
the third is a power of ten, and the fourth is a
tolerance for the range of values.
25Resistors (2)
- The number associated with the colors are
- black 0
- brown 1
- red 2
- orange 3
- yellow 4
- green 5
- blue 6
- purple 7
- gray 8
- white 9
- In the tolerance band
- gold means 5
- silver means 10
- no tolerance band means 20
For example, the single resistor shown herehas
colors (top to bottom)brown, green, brown and
goldUsing our table, we can see that the
resistance is 15101 ? 150 ?with a tolerance
of 5
26Summary
.. speed of an electron
.. resistance to current