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Published byTheodora Tate Modified over 9 years ago
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Conductors: Materials where electrons flow freely. Electrons are loose in atom Examples - Metals (silver, copper, gold, aluminum, iron, steel, brass, bronze, mercury) and dirty water Ex. Electric wires are usually made of copper (a good conductor)
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Insulators: Materials where electrons do not flow freely. Electrons are held tightly to the atom Examples - glass, rubber, oil, asphalt, porcelain, ceramic, cotton, paper, wood, plastic, air Ex. Electric wires have a plastic coating (a good insulator)
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Both insulators and conductors can be charged. The difference is that On an insulator charges are not able to move from place to place. On a conductor, charges can freely move. If you try to place charge on a conductor, it will quickly spread over the entire conductor.
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Charging by conduction Electrons transferred when one charged material touches another ▪ Charging with contact ▪ Both objects end up with same charge
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Charging by Friction Electrons transferred when one material rubs against another Objects end up with opposite charges Example Rubbing plastic rod with rabbit fur Rubbing balloon on sweater or hair ▪ Because they are insulators only area rubbed is charged not the entire object
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You walk across the rug, reach for the doorknob and..........ZAP!!! You get a static shock. Static electricity - accumulation of excess electric charge
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Charging by Induction Electrons transferred when one material is near another Charging without touching Examples Tape attracting pieces of paper
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Charged objects lose their charge when grounded. become neutral
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Storm clouds generates static electricity Areas of positive and negative charges build up Charge builds & causes discharge between cloud/ground Lightning = electric charges move through air, collide and emit light
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