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Electricity

Electricity. Review of Year 12 Year 13 Material Internal Resistance. Electrostatic Forces and Coulomb’s Law. Like charges are repelled from one another, and unlike charges are attracted. The forces involved in this repulsion/ attraction are given by Coulomb’s law:. Electric Current.

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Electricity

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  1. Electricity Review of Year 12 Year 13 Material Internal Resistance

  2. Electrostatic Forces and Coulomb’s Law • Like charges are repelled from one another, and unlike charges are attracted. • The forces involved in this repulsion/ attraction are given by Coulomb’s law:

  3. Electric Current • The electric force can be used to push charge (measured in coulombs) around a circuit. • A large positive charge is maintained at one terminal of the battery, and a large negative charge at the other terminal – when they are linked by a circuit, charge flows towards the negative terminal. • This results in electric current.

  4. Energy and Potential Difference • For current to be maintained, the difference in charge between the terminals needs to be maintained. • This means energy must be continuously added to the system. • The energy source (battery, power pack, wall-socket) provides a potential difference – this is the energy that it gives to one coulomb of charge.

  5. Internal Resistance (def’n) • Internal resistance refers to the resistance of a voltage source when a current is flowing. • This results in a lowered terminal voltage.

  6. Internal Resistance: • A battery in a circuit can be regarded as a source of EMF (electromotive force), ε, and a resistor in series. • If we measure the voltage, V, across the terminals of a battery in a circuit, we are therefore measuring: V = ε – Ir V is the terminal voltage, ε is the EMF I is the current flowing r is the internal resistance ε r

  7. Practical Activity: Internal Resistance

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