1 / 55

Lecture 08

Lecture 08. Current & Resistance February 23, 2005. Happenings. Yesterday (Monday) We completed the topic of capacitance Today We begin to study electric current and the concept of resistance. Tomorrow (Friday) Continue with electric current QUIZ on the material from this week.

ruthallen
Download Presentation

Lecture 08

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 08 Current & Resistance February 23, 2005

  2. Happenings • Yesterday (Monday) • We completed the topic of capacitance • Today • We begin to study electric current and the concept of resistance. • Tomorrow (Friday) • Continue with electric current • QUIZ on the material from this week. • WebAssign on C is due • Monday • WebAssign on Resistance and current is due

  3. New Topic • Current and Resistance Commercial Resistors Color Coded

  4. Conductors • In the past we decided that in a conductor • The Electric Field is ZERO because we postulated that no charges were to move. • Static Situation • Any electric field must be at the surface • That field must be normal to the surface • Let’s look at another situation.

  5. Consider a conductor • The mobile electrons can “move” under the influence of an electric field. • We then have a “current” (to be defined) flowing in the wire. • But WAIT … how can we????? • Only if … V1 V2 Electric Field Walla ….. a CIRCUIT

  6. + - From the Past Q Flows and then stops. Vo

  7. Short! Vo A Different Situation circuit • Charge will begin to flow through the short. • Charge can flow back into the battery and discharge it. • Wire can get warm, emit light or even burn our (fuse). • The FLOW of charge is defined as a current.

  8. Current isa good thing

  9. Franklin’s Impact on Physics!!! ELECTRONS CURRENT • Positive charge will leave the battery from the positive terminal and flow through an external circuit to the negative terminal. • Electrons will go the other way. • Current is defined as the flow of POSITIVE CHARGE. • + charge does not normally flow in a wire.

  10. Definition • Current is the total amount of charge that flows through a “wire” in one second. • Current is measured in Coulombs per second. • A current of one coulomb per second is defined as an AMPERE. (Amp.)

  11. CONCISE DEFINITION: CURRENT Current will flow throughout the cross-section of the wire (usually). Current through aa’ is the same as the current through bb’ and cc’. What is DIFFERENT between aa’ and bb’ with respect to current?

  12. What’s Different?? i=5 amps CURRENT DENSITY A=.1 m2 A=0.05 m2 J=5 amps/.05 m2 = 100 amps/m2 J=5 amps / .1 m2 = 50 amps/m2

  13. Current Current can’t “pile up” at a point n a circuit.

  14. Example First introduction to Kirchoff’s Node Equation

  15. Consider 3A ^ 2A v 5A  6A 8 A

  16. + - Vo Question:A 5 Amp current is set up in a circuit for 6 minutes by a 6 Volt Battery. How much chemical energy is provided by the battery? CIRCUIT OF SOME SORT WORK (Energy) per unit Charge = qV

  17. wire i  V Definition Ohm’s Law High Low Current increases with Potential Difference (V)

  18. Observations • Wires and Resistors are made from conducting materials. • These materials have some fundamental properties associated with them. • Electrons are attached to atoms. • Outer electrons weakly bound • Small Force (Applied Electric Field) can easily push them. • They bump into things which retard their motion. • The more things that retard their motion, the more difficult it is to push a current via an applied potential difference. • Thus, the resistance goes up.

  19. What kinds of things cause resistance? • Sudden Constrictions in the conductor including bends! • Underlying structure- • Amorphous • Crystalline • Defects • Impurities • Thermal Collisions • Temperature

  20. Fundamental Property RESISTANCE vs. RESISTIVITY • Consider a wire made of some material. • Resistance is a property of the rire itself … the material and the shape. • New Quantity: • RESISTIVITY is a property of the material itself regardless of its shape/

  21. Consider our wire: • What would happen to the current if we • Increased the voltage? • Increased the Area? • Increased the length? L A V

  22. Summary R is called the RESISTANCE and is measured in OHMS (W)

  23. Define CONDUCTIVITY s

  24. Resistivity – Ohm-Meters

  25. WIRES

  26. BACK TO OHM V=iR i=V/R

  27. Not EVERYTHING is a resistor The Semiconductor Diode

  28. Effect of Temperature

  29. Temperature Linear over a limited temperature range.

  30. Question-For an 18 gauge wire of length L to have a resistance of 1 ohm what must L be if the material is copper? L=46 meters! (d for 18 gauge is about 1 mm)

  31. A current of 6.5 Amps exists in a 9 Ohm resistor for 5 minutes. How many coulombs and how many electrons pass through the resistor in this time? Coulombs: 6.5 COULOMBS per Second for 5 minutes 6.5C x 5 min X 60 sec/min = 1950 coulombs Number of electrons = # coulombs / electron charge = 1950 / 1.6 x 10-19 = 1.22 x 10 +22

  32. Microscopic Theory

  33. J and E

  34. Consider a wire

  35. Micro-View “Resistivity” • depends on the material and is the mean time between collisions • ease of motion – mobility • resistance to motion - scattering

  36. + E L E C T R O N s V i - Power Battery supplies energy to the resistor which, in turn, dissipates it in the form of heat. Work done on charge Q = Q x V REMEMBER: P=iV and P=i2R

  37. ENGINEERED MATERIALS!!! Semiconductors The Spectrum of Conductors

  38. When 105 volts are applied across a wire that is 12 meters long and has a 0.30 mm radius, the current density us 1.7 x 10 4 A/m2. What is the resistivity of the wire?? From the current density we can find the CURRENT. i=JA = 1.7 x 104 amp/m2 X (p X 0.32) mm2 X (1m/1000mm)2 I = 4.8 ma R= V/i = 105 volts / (4.8 x 10-3) amps = 2.18 x 104 ohms r = 2.18 x 104 ohms x 3 x 10-7 m2 / 12m = 0.005 ohm-meters

  39. copper 12 volts 0 volts The figure below gives the electrical potential V(x) along a copper wire carrying a uniform current, from a point at higher potential (x=0m) to a point at a lower potential (x=3m). The wire has a radius of 2.45 mm. What is the current in the wire? What does the graph tell us?? *The length of the wire is 3 meters. *The potential difference across the wire is 12 m volts. *The wire is uniform. Let’s get rid of the mm radius and convert it to area in square meters: A=pr2 = 3.14159 x 2.452 x 10-6 m2 or A=1.9 x 10-5 m 2 Material is Copper so resistivity is (from table) = 1.69 x 10-8 ohm meters

  40. We have all we need….

  41. R1 R2 V1 V2 V i i Series Combinations

  42. R1, I1 R2, I2 V Parallel Combination??

  43. Materials

  44. VERY IMPORTANT MATERIALSILICON

  45. Silicon Crystal Lattice

  46. Electron Freed!

  47. Add an impurity

  48. Special Impurities

  49. Effect of Impurities on r

  50. Importance P N P N A Diode! Transistor P N P

More Related