Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Current, resistance and electromotive force
Advertisements

Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.
Static charges will move if potential difference and conducting path exists between two points Electric field due to potential difference creates force.
Charges (electrons) moving in a conductor Ohm’s Law & resistance to flow of charge Energy and power in electrical circuits Current, resistance, and electromotive.
Chapter 27 Current And Resistance Electric Current Electric current is the rate of flow of charge through some region of space The SI unit of current.
Electric Currents and Resistance
Current and Resistance FCI.  Define the current.  Understand the microscopic description of current.  Discuss the rat at which the power.
Chapter 27: Current and Resistance Reading assignment: Chapter 27 Homework 27.1, due Wednesday, March 4: OQ1, 5, 14 Homework 27.2, due Friday, March 6:
Current and Resistance
Chapter 17 Current and Resistance. Electric Current Let us look at the charges flowing perpendicularly to a surface of area A The electric current is.
Electric Current Whenever electric charges of like signs move, an electric current is said to exist The current is the rate at which the charge flows through.
Ch 181 Chapter 18 © 2006, B.J. Lieb Some figures electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, New Jersey Giancoli,
Current and Resistance
1 Chapter 27 Current and Resistance. 2 Electric Current Electric current is the rate of flow of charge through some region of space The SI unit of current.
Chapter 25 Current, Resistance, Electromotive Force
Current and Resistance (Cont.)
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Admin: No discussion sections this week. Register for MasteringPhysics Course ID: MPHOLDER67874.
Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. { Chapter 25 Current and Resistance.
Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force
CHAPTER 17 Current Electricity
College Physics, 7th Edition
Day 13 Current Electricity LO: Current electricity involves continuously moving electrons LO: Definition of “Current” and “Amps” AGENDA: Do Now Notes HWp.
Electric Currents and Resistance
Lecture 12 Current & Resistance (2)
Current and Resistance Chapter 26 Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Electric Current, Ohm’s Law, and Electric Circuits ISAT 241 Fall 2002 David J. Lawrence.
-Electric Current -Resistance -Factors that affect resistance -Microscopic View of Current AP Physics C Mrs. Coyle.
Chapter 24 Electric Current. The electric current I is the rate of flow of charge through some region of space The SI unit of current is Ampere (A): 1.
Current and Direct Current Circuits
Chapter 27 Current Resistance And Resistor. Review The current is defined and its unit is ampere (A), a base unit in the SI system I A The.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education Inc. PowerPoint ® Lectures for University Physics, Thirteenth Edition – Hugh D. Young and Roger A. Freedman Lectures.
Current, Resistance and Power
Ch 181 Chapter 18 Electric Currents © 2002, B.J. Lieb.
Chapter 17 Current and Resistance. Electric Current Let us look at the charges flowing perpendicularly to a surface of area A The electric current is.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture 6: Electric Currents & Resistance.
 I1I1   R R R I2I2 I3I3 Lecture 11 Current & Resistance.
Electric Current and Resistance Unit 16. Electric Current  The current is the rate at which the charge flows through a surface Look at the charges flowing.
Chapter 27 Current and Resistance. Intro Up until now, our study of electricity has been focused Electrostatics (charges at equilibrium conditions). We.
Chapter 26 Current and Resistance. 26.2: Electric Current: Although an electric current is a stream of moving charges, not all moving charges constitute.
 Electricity is caused by the flow (or net movement) of Electrons  Electric Current – the rate that positive charges flow in a circuit › Actually a.
Part 1 Current & Energy Transfer Electric Current.
Phys 2180 Lecture (5) Current and resistance and Direct current circuits.
Current and Resistance Chapter 26 Copyright © 2014 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. All rights reserved.
Ohm’s Law and Resistance AP Physics C Montwood High School R. Casao.
Chapter 27 Current and Resistance. Electric Current The electric current I is the rate of flow of charge through some region of space The SI unit of current.
Chapter 17 Current and Resistance. Electric Current Whenever electric charges of like signs move, an electric current is said to exist The current is.
1 Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force Sections 1-5, 7 Chapter 28 Physics ch 28.
Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force
Current and Resistance
Current and Resistance FCI.  Define the current.  Understand the microscopic description of current.  Discuss the rat at which the power.
Chapter 27 Current and Resistance. Electrical Conduction – A Model Treat a conductor as a regular array of atoms plus a collection of free electrons.
Chapter 27: Current and Resistance Fig 27-CO, p Electric Current 27.2 Resistance and Ohm’s Law 27.4 Resistance and Temperature 27.6 Electrical.
Capacitor Examples C 2C C C/2 d/4 3d/4 a.
Electric Charge Atomic ParticleChargeMass Electron –1.6  C9.11  Kg Proton +1.6  C1.673  Kg Neutron  Kg Atomic.
Lectures 7 to 10 The Electric Current and the resistance Electric current and Ohm’s law The Electromotive Force and Internal Resistance Electrical energy.
19-2: Resistance Objectives: Calculate resistance, current, and potential difference using the definition of resistance. Distinguish between ohmic and.
Chapter 27 Current Resistance And Resistor. Review The current is defined and its unit is ampere (A), a base unit in the SI system I A The.
Lecture 10-1 ©2008 by W.H. Freeman and Company. Lecture 10-2 Capacitor Examples 2C2C C C C/2 CCCC C ?C?C ?=2/3.
-Electric Current -Resistance -Factors that affect resistance -Microscopic View of Current AP Physics C Mrs. Coyle.
Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force
Chapter 27: Current and Resistance
Chapter 24 Electric Current.
Current and Resistance
Chapter 27: Current and Resistance
Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force
Question of the day What additional quantities are necessary to describe the behavior of an electric field when the charge moves?
Current and Resistance
Circuit Components.
Chapter 27: Current and Resistance
Presentation transcript:

Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force Chapter 25 Current, Resistance, and Electromotive Force © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Learning Goals for Chapter 25 Looking forward at … the meaning of electric current, and how charges move in a conductor. how to calculate the resistance of a conductor from its dimensions and its resistivity or conductivity. how an electromotive force (emf) makes it possible for current to flow in a circuit. how to do calculations involving energy and power in circuits. how to use a simple model to understand the flow of current in metals. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Introduction Electric circuits contain charges in motion. In a flashlight, the amount of current that flows out of the bulb is the same as the amount that flows into the bulb. It is the energy of the charges that decreases as the current flows through light bulbs. Circuits are at the heart of modern devices such as computers, televisions, and industrial power systems. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Current A current is any motion of charge from one region to another. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Direction of current flow A current can be produced by positive or negative charge flow. Conventional current is treated as a flow of positive charges. In a metallic conductor, the moving charges are electrons — but the current still points in the direction positive charges would flow. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Signs of charge carriers In general, a conductor may contain several different kinds of moving charged particles. An example is current flow in an ionic solution. In the sodium chloride solution shown, current can be carried by both positive sodium ions and negative chlorine ions The total current I is found by adding up the currents due to each kind of charged particle. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Current density We can define a vector current density that includes the direction of the drift velocity: The vector current density is always in the same direction as the electric field, no matter what the signs of the charge carriers are. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Resistivity The resistivity of a material is the ratio of the electric field in the material to the current density it causes: The conductivity is the reciprocal of the resistivity. The next slide shows the resistivity of various types of materials. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Resistivities at room temperature (20°C) Substance ρ (Ω ∙ m) Copper 1.72 ×10−8 Gold 2.44 ×10−8 Lead 22 ×10−8 Pure carbon (graphite) 3.5 ×10−5 Glass 1010 – 1014 Teflon >1013 Wood 108 – 1011 Conductors Semiconductor: Insulators © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Circuit boards and resistivity The copper “wires,” or traces, on this circuit board are printed directly onto the surface of the dark-colored insulating board. Even though the traces are very close to each other, the board has such a high resistivity that essentially no current can flow between the traces. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Resistivity and temperature The resistivity of a metallic conductor nearly always increases with increasing temperature. Over a small temperature range, the resistivity of a metal can be represented approximately: © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Temperature coefficients of resistivity Material α [(°C)−1] Aluminum 0.00039 Carbon (graphite) −0.0005 Copper 0.00393 Iron 0.0050 Lead 0.0043 Silver 0.0038 Tungsten 0.0045 © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Resistivity and temperature The resistivity of graphite (a semiconductor) decreases with increasing temperature, since at higher temperatures, more electrons “shake loose” from the atoms and become mobile. Measuring the resistivity of a small semiconductor crystal is a sensitive measure of temperature; this is the principle of a type of thermometer called a thermistor. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Superconductivity Some materials show a phenomenon called superconductivity. As the temperature decreases, the resistivity at first decreases smoothly, like that of any metal. Below a certain critical temperature Tc a phase transition occurs and the resistivity suddenly drops to zero. Once a current has been established in a superconducting ring, it continues indefinitely without the presence of any driving field. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Resistance and Ohm’s law The resistance of a conductor is The potential across a conductor is given by Ohm’s law: V = IR. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Resistors are color-coded for easy identification This resistor has a resistance of 5.7 kΩ with a tolerance of ±10%. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Ohmic resistors For a resistor that obeys Ohm’s law, a graph of current as a function of potential difference (voltage) is a straight line. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Nonohmic resistors In devices that do not obey Ohm’s law, the relationship of voltage to current may not be a direct proportion, and it may be different for the two directions of current. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Electromotive force and circuits Just as a water fountain requires a pump, an electric circuit requires a source of electromotive force to sustain a steady current. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Electromotive force and circuits The influence that makes current flow from lower to higher potential is called electromotive force (abbreviated emf and pronounced “ee-em-eff”), and a circuit device that provides emf is called a source of emf. Note that “electromotive force” is a poor term because emf is not a force but an energy-per-unit-charge quantity, like potential. The SI unit of emf is the same as that for potential, the volt (1 V = 1 J/C). A typical flashlight battery has an emf of 1.5 V; this means that the battery does 1.5 J of work on every coulomb of charge that passes through it. We’ll use the symbol (a script capital E) for emf. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Internal resistance Real sources of emf actually contain some internal resistance r. The terminal voltage of the 12-V battery shown at the right is less than 12 V when it is connected to the light bulb. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Table 25.4 — Symbols for circuit diagrams © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Potential changes The figure shows how the potential varies as we go around a complete circuit. The potential rises when the current goes through a battery, and drops when it goes through a resistor. Going all the way around the loop brings the potential back to where it started. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Energy and power in electric circuits The box represents a circuit element with potential difference Vab = Va − Vb between its terminals and current I passing through it in the direction from a toward b. If the potential at a is lower than at b, then there is a net transfer of energy out of the circuit element. The time rate of energy transfer is power, denoted by P, so we write: © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Power The upper rectangle represents a source with emf and internal resistance r, connected by ideal wires to an external circuit represented by the lower box. Point a is at higher potential than point b, so Va > Vb and Vab is positive. P = VabI © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.

Metallic conduction Electrons in a conductor are free to move through the crystal, colliding at intervals with the stationary positive ions. The motion of the electrons is analogous to the motion of a ball rolling down an inclined plane and bouncing off pegs in its path. © 2016 Pearson Education Inc.