Title: Electricity Chapter 17
1ElectricityChapter 17
2Chapter 17- Electric Charge
- The two different kinds of Electric charges are
positive and negative - Like charges repel unlike charges attract
- Protons and neutrons are relatively fixed in the
nucleus of the atom but electrons are easily
transferred from one atom to another.
3Chapter 17- Electric Charge
- All charge is a result of the movement of
electrons. - (Chemistry Review)
- All atoms begin as neutral- with no charge.
- If you take away negative electrons then the atom
has a positive charge. - If you add negative electrons then the atom
becomes negatively charged. - All atoms with a charge are called ions.
4Chapter 17- Electric Charge
- What causes the electrons to move?
- Friction! When objects rub together electrons are
moved from one object to the other. - This causes one object to be positively charged
and the other to be negatively charged and the
process is called charge by contact.
5Chapter 17- Electric Charge
6Chapter 17- Electric Charge
- The fundamental unit of charge, e, has been
determined to be 1.6 X 10-19 coulombs - C (coulomb) is the SI unit of electric charge
- 1.0 C contains 6.2 X 1018 electrons
7Chapter 17- Electric Charge
- Materials in which electric charges move freely
are called conductors. - Ex Copper, Aluminum, most metals
- Materials in which electric charges do not move
freely are called insulators. - Ex Wood, glass, styrofoam
- Semiconductors are materials between conductors
and insulators. - Ex silicon, germanium
8Chapter 17- Electric Charge
- Grounding is when a conductor is connected to the
Earth by another conducting object such as copper
wire. Many times it is a safety precaution in
electrical devices.
9Grounding
10- Induction is the process of charging a conductor
by bringing it near another charged object and
grounding the conductor.
11Chapter 17- Electric Force
- Electric Force two or more charged objects near
one another may experience motion either toward
or away from each other because each object
exerts a force on the other objects. - Electric force is an example of a field force (a
force which does not require physical contact to
act).
12Chapter 17- Electric Force
- Coulombs Law
- Felectric kC(q1q2/r2)
- Electric force Coulomb constant X (charge
1)(charge 2) / (distance)2 - Coulomb constant in SI units
- kC 8.99 X 109 Nm2/C2
13Electric Charge (on pg 630)
Particle Charge (C) Mass (kg)
Electron -1.60 x 10-19 C 9.109 x 10-31 kg
Proton 1.60 x 10-19 C 1.673 x 10-27 kg
Neutron 0 1.675 x 10-27 kg
14Example
- The electron and proton of a hydrogen atom are
separated, on average, by a distance of about 5.3
x 10-11 m. A.) Find the magnitudes of the
electric force and B.) The gravitational force
that each particle exerts on the other.
- Given
- r 5.3 x10-11m
- kc 8.99 x109 Nm2/C2
- qe -1.60 x 10-19 C
- qp 1.60 x 10-19 C
- me 9.109 x 10-31 kg
- mp 1.673 x 10-27 kg
- G 6.67 x10-11 Nm2/kg2
15Example (magnitude of electrical field force)
- Felectric kc((qeqp)/r2)
- Because we are finding the magnitude of electric
field force (scalar) we can disregard the sign of
the charges and simplify. - Felectric kc((q2)/r2)
- F (8.99 x109 Nm2/C2)(1.60 x 10-19C)2
- (5.3
x10-11m)2 - Felectric 8.2 x 10-8 N
16Example (magnitude of gravitational force)
- Given r 5.3 x10-11m me 9.109 x 10-31 kg mp
1.673 x 10-27 kg G 6.67 x10-11 Nm2/kg2 - Fg G(memp)/r2
- Fg (6.67 x10-11 Nm2/kg2)(9.109 x10-31kg)(1.673
x10-27kg) - (5.3 x10-11m)2
- Fg 3.6 x 10-47 N
17Chapter 17- Electric Field
- Electric field a region in space around a
charged object in which a stationary charged
object experiences an electric force because of
its charge. - No contact needs to take place for this to occur