Electricity - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Electricity

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Electricity Static and Dynamic Magnetism Electricity Electricity refers to all phenomena caused by electric charges (positive and negative) When is it positive? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electricity


1
Electricity
  • Static and Dynamic
  • Magnetism

2
Electricity
  • Electricity refers to all phenomena caused by
    electric charges (positive and negative)

3
When is it positive? When is it negative?
  • A negatively charged body has more electrons than
    protons
  • A Positively charged body less electrons than
    protons


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4
Electric Charges
  • Elementary electric charge is the charge of an
    electron or protons (1,602 x 10-19 C)
  • C refers to Coulomb

5
The BasicsForces of attraction and repulsion
  1. Like electric charges repulse each other
  2. Opposite electric charges attract each other
  3. The force that pushes charges together or apart
    is called the electric force
  4. The Law of conservation of charges states that
    no charge is created or destroyed only transferred

6
How do we give charge?
  • How a material reacts when given a charge will
    determine in which category they will be placed
  • Conductors
  • Insulators
  • Semi-conductors

7
Link to the periodic Table
  • Which elements do you believe would be considered
    conductors?
  • Which elements do you believe would be considered
    insulators?
  • Which elements do you believe would be considered
    semi-conductors?

8
Conductors
  • Substances that allow the free flow of electrons
  • Usually metals (from the periodic table) because
    they are willing to give up their valence
    electrons
  • Can also be an electrolytic solution
  • electrolyte is any substance containing free ions
    that make the substance electrically conductive

9
What is an ion?
  • An ion is an atom that as become electrically
    charged by losing or gaining one or more
    electrons

10
Periodic Table and ions
11
Insulator
  • Substance that inhibits (prevents) the free flow
    of electrons, because they want to hold on to
    their valence electrons.
  • Once charged, the charges will stay in a specific
    location
  • Often non-metals as well as wood, plastic, glass,
    ceramics, rubber, silk and air

12
Semi-conductors
  • Substance in which the conductivity depends on
    the conditions
  • Metalloids and carbon are examples of
    semi-conductors

13
Electrical fields
  • The electric field is the region in which the
    electric force of an object can act.

14

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16
Static Electricity
  • All phenomena related to electric charges at rest
  • Over time an electrically charged body can loose
    its charge gradually
  • In other cases, an object can recover its neutral
    state quickly through an electrostatic discharge.

17
Hey Look!!! A new carpet
Shuffle
Shuffle
Shuffle
18
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19
OOPS!!
Lump of Coal
20
Charging an object
  • By friction

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21
Charging an object
  • By friction
  • Start with two neutral objects
  • When rubbing the two objects together, electrons
    from one object will be ripped off by the atoms
    of the second object
  • End two objects with opposite charge

22
  • Tendency to have
  • a negative charge
  • Tendency to have
  • a positive charge
  • Plastic
  • Gold
  • Nickel, Copper
  • Sulfur
  • Wood, amber, resin
  • Coton
  • Paper
  • Silk
  • Lead
  • Wool
  • Glass

23
Charging an object
  • Conduction
  • One charged object touches a neutral object
  • The Charged object shares its charge with the
    neutral object
  • We are left with two objects of the same charge





24
Charging an object
  • Induction
  • One neutral, one charged
  • Without touching the objects together, the
    charges in the neutral object will separate
  • One charged, one partially charged

WEEEE!!!






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