Title: ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS
1ELECTRICAL CIRCUITS
- All you need to be an inventor is a good
imagination and a pile of junk. - -Thomas Edison
2Ohms Law
I V / R
I Current (Amperes) (amps) V Voltage
(Volts) R Resistance (ohms)
Georg Simon Ohm (1787-1854)
3How you should be thinking about electric
circuits
Voltage a force that pushes the current through
the circuit (in this picture it would be
equivalent to gravity)
4How you should be thinking about electric
circuits
Resistance friction that impedes flow of current
through the circuit (rocks in the river)
5How you should be thinking about electric
circuits
Current the actual substance that is flowing
through the wires of the circuit (electrons!)
6Would This Work?
7Would This Work?
8Would This Work?
9The Central Concept Closed Circuit
10circuit diagram
Scientists usually draw electric circuits using
symbols
cell
switch
lamp
wires
11Simple Circuits
- Series circuit
- All in a row
- 1 path for electricity
- 1 light goes out and the circuit is broken
- Parallel circuit
- Many paths for electricity
- 1 light goes out and the others stay on
121
2
3
The current decreases because the resistance
increases. Ohms Law says that IV/R. The
voltage in the system is constant, resistance
increases.
13PARALLEL CIRCUIT
- Place two bulbs in parallel. What do you notice
about the brightness of the bulbs? - Add a third light bulb in the circuit. What do
you notice about the brightness of the bulbs? - Remove the middle bulb from the circuit. What
happened?
14measuring current
Electric current is measured in amps (A) using an
ammeter connected in series in the circuit.
A
15measuring current
This is how we draw an ammeter in a circuit.
A
A
PARALLEL CIRCUIT
SERIES CIRCUIT
16measuring voltage
The electrical push which the cell gives to the
current is called the voltage. It is measured in
volts (V) on a voltmeter
V
17measuring voltage
This is how we draw a voltmeter in a circuit.
V
V
SERIES CIRCUIT
PARALLEL CIRCUIT
18OHMs LAW
- Measure the current and voltage across each
circuit. - Use Ohms Law to compute resistance
- Series Circuit
Voltage Current Resistance
Parallel Circuit
Voltage Current Resistance
19measuring current
SERIES CIRCUIT
2A
- current is the same
- at all points in the
- circuit.
2A
2A
PARALLEL CIRCUIT
2A
2A
- current is shared
- between the
- components
1A
1A
20 fill in the missing ammeter readings.
3A
?
3A
?
4A
?
1A
?
4A
4A
1A
?
1A
21The circuit is no longer complete, therefore
current can not flow
The voltage decreases because the current is
decreased and the resistance increases.
22The current remains the same. The total
resistance drops in a parallel circuit as more
bulbs are added
The current increases.
23Series and Parallel Circuits
- Series Circuits
- only one end of each component is connected
- e.g. Christmas tree lights
- Parallel Circuits
- both ends of a component are connected
- e.g. household lighting
24Circuit in Diagram Form
_
current
In a closed circuit, current flows around the loop
electrons flow opposite the indicated current
direction! (repelled by negative terminal)
Current flowing through the filament makes it
glow. No Loop ? No Current ? No Light
25copy the following circuits and fill in the
missing ammeter readings.
3A
?
3A
?
4A
?
1A
?
4A
4A
1A
?
1A
26measuring voltage
Different cells produce different voltages. The
bigger the voltage supplied by the cell, the
bigger the current.
Unlike an ammeter, a voltmeter is connected
across the components
Scientist usually use the term Potential
Difference (pd) when they talk about voltage.
27measuring voltage
V
V
V
V
28series circuit
- voltage is shared between the components
3V
1.5V
1.5V
29parallel circuit
- voltage is the same in all parts of the circuit.
3V
3V
3V
30measuring current voltage
copy the following circuits on the next two
slides.
complete the missing current and voltage readings.
remember the rules for current and voltage in
series and parallel circuits.
31measuring current voltage
a)
6V
4A
A
V
V
A
32measuring current voltage
b)
6V
4A
A
V
A
V
A
33answers
a)
b)
6V
4A
6V
4A
6V
4A
4A
2A
3V
3V
4A
6V
2A
34Voltage, Current, and Power
- One Volt is a Joule per Coulomb (J/C)
- One Amp of current is one Coulomb per second
(6.24 x1018 electrons/second). - If I have one volt (J/C) and one amp (C/s), then
multiplying gives Joules per second (J/s) - this is power J/s Watts
- So the formula for electrical power is just
- More work is done per unit time the higher the
voltage and/or the higher the current
P VI power voltage ? current
35Electric Circuit Builder Applet
- http//thefusebox.northernpowergrid.com/page/circu
itbuilder.cfm - Tutorials http//resources.woodlandsjunior.kent.s
ch.uk/revision/science/electricity.htm - Quiz http//www.glencoe.com/qe/science.php?qi224
6
36AC/DC
37Direct Current
- If the voltage is maintained between two points
in a circuit, charge will flow in one direction -
from high to low potential. This is called direct
current (DC) - Battery-powered circuits are dc circuits.
38Alternating Current
- If the high low voltage terminals switch
locations periodically, the current will flow
back and forth in the circuit. This is called
alternating current (AC). - Circuits powered by electrical outlets are AC
circuits.
39AC in the US
- In the US, current changes direction 120 times
per second, for a frequency of 60 cycles per
second or 60 Hertz. - Normal outlet voltage in the US is 110-120 volts,
although some large household appliances run on
220-240 volts.
40Converting AC to DC
- AC is converted to DC using devices called
diodes, which allow charges to move in only 1
direction.