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Chapter 19 A Microscopic View of Electric Circuits
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In steady state current is the same everywhere in a series circuit. ii What is the drift speed? Note: density of electrons n cannot change if same metal What is E? E thick E thin E and Drift Speed
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1 mm 0.1 mm v thick = 4 10 -5 m/s v thin = ? E thin = 10 -1 N/CE thick = ? Exercise v thin = 400 10 -5 m/s E thick = 10 -3 N/C
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Does current fill the wire? Is E uniform across the wire? E must be parallel to the wire E is the same along the wire 00V AB V CD Direction of Electric Field in a Wire
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E Bulb filament and wires are metals – there cannot be excess charges in the interior Are excess charges on the battery? E E What charges make the electric field in the wires? Electric Field in a Wire
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Van de Graaff generator A Mechanical Battery Electron Current
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E E bends Field due to the Battery In the steady state there must be some other charges somewhere that contribute to the net electric field in such a way that the electric field points upstream everywhere. Blue = v drift
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Surface charge arranges itself in such a way as to produce a pattern of electric field that follows the direction of the wire and has such a magnitude that current is the same along the wire. Field due to the Battery
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Smooth transition from + surface charge to – to provide constant E. E Field due to Battery The amount of surface charge is proportional to the voltage.
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The average magnitude of E in a closed circuit can vary from ~.01 V/m in copper wire to more than 100 V/m in Nichrome wire - due to a much different electron mobility. What is easy: to draw E and i What is complex: to draw surface charge distribution Amount of Surface Charge
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Connecting a Circuit The initial transient When making the final connection in a circuit, feedback forces a rapid rearrangement of the surface charges leading to the steady state. This period of adjustment before establishing the steady state is called the initial transient.
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E net Connecting a Circuit The initial transient Before the gap is closed, the net field in the wire must be zero, because the system is in static equilibrium. E other E gap faces is due to charges on gap faces
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Speed of light: 30 cm/ns The initial transient Connecting a Circuit In just a few nanoseconds the rearrangement of the surface charges will extend all the way around the circuit.
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1.Static equilibrium: nothing moving (no current) 3.Steady state: constant current (nonzero) 2.Initial transient: short-time process leading to the steady state Connecting a Circuit
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Just after connection: E may be the same everywhere After steady state is reached: Surface Charge and Resistors
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A Wide Resistor low mobility
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Energy conservation (the Kirchhoff loop rule [2 nd law]): V 1 + V 2 + V 3 + … = 0 along any closed path in a circuit V wire = EL V battery = ? V= U/q energy per unit charge Energy in a Circuit
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non-Coulomb force on each e ECEC FCFC 1. F C =eE C Coulomb force on each e 2. F C =F NC The function of a battery is to produce and maintain a charge separation. Energy input per unit charge emf – electromotive force The emf is measured in Volts, but it is not a potential difference! The emf is the energy input per unit charge. chemical, nuclear, gravitational… Potential Difference Across the Battery Fully charged battery.
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The current node rule (Charge conservation) Kirchhoff node or junction rule [1 st law]: In the steady state, the electron current entering a node in a circuit is equal to the electron current leaving that node Analysis of Circuits V 1 + V 2 + V 3 + … = 0 along any closed path in a circuit The loop rule (Energy conservation) Kirchhoff loop rule [2 nd law]: V= U/q energy per unit charge Conventional current: I = |q|nAuE
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Round-trip potential difference: Field and Current in a Simple Circuit We will neglect the battery’s internal resistance for the time being.
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Round-trip potential difference: Path 1 Path 2 Field and Current in a Simple Circuit
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Nichrome wire (resistive) Question: Twice the Length 12 A)i 1 = i 2 B)i 1 = 2*i 2 C)i 1 = ½ i 2 i1i1 i2i2
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Nichrome wire (resistive) Twice the Length Current is halved when increasing the length of the wire by a factor of 2.
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Doubling the Cross-Sectional Area Nichrome wire Doubling the cross-sectional area of the wire will A)not change electron current B)increase electron current by 2 C)decrease electron current by 2
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Doubling the Cross-Sectional Area Nichrome wire Electron current in the wire increases by a factor of two if the cross- sectional area of the wire doubles. Loop: emf - EL = 0 Can we achieve infinitely large current using very thick wire?
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F NC = F C = eE C fully charged Increase mobility – current increases Real battery cannot provide current Internal battery resistance – limits maximum current Drift speed in battery: fixed Internal Resistance of a Battery We will neglect the battery’s internal resistance for the time being. Approximate V batt = emf
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The number or length of the connecting wires has little effect on the amount of current in the circuit. u wires >> u filament Work done by a battery goes mostly into energy dissipation in the bulb (heat). V Across Connecting Wires
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