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Chapter 19

Chapter 19. Current and Resistance. Describe electric current Relate current, charge, and time Drift speed Resistance Resistivity Behavior of Resistors Superconductors Electric power. Chapter 19 Objectives. Current. I. -. +.

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Chapter 19

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  1. Chapter 19 Current and Resistance

  2. Describe electric current Relate current, charge, and time Drift speed Resistance Resistivity Behavior of Resistors Superconductors Electric power Chapter 19 Objectives

  3. Current I - + • Electric current, I, is the rate at which electric charges move through a given area. • It would be like standing in front of Burger King and count all the cars traveling down Henry Street over a given time period. • For our purposes, we will consider the traveling of positive charges from positive fields to negative fields.

  4. Drift Speed • The electric force due to an electric field present causes electrons to flow. • The electrons do not flow in a straight line, but rather in a zigzag path. • The nature of the path is due to the collisions of the electrons with other atoms in the conductor. • The electrons flow opposite of the direction of the force due to the nature of electric charges repelling like charges. • Remember that a negative electron flowing to the negative post of the battery would actually repel. • So some work is required to move that electron. • And that work can only be done by the electric potential energy that was stored in the voltage source. • Since the pattern is unpredictable, we can only come up with an average speed. • The net speed of a charge carrier moving in an electric field is known as drift speed.

  5. Amperes Q 1A=1C I = Δt 1 s • The SI unit for measuring current is an ampere, A. • Remember current is the rate of flow of electric charges, so the formula looks like:

  6. Resistance • The resistance of a conductor is the ratio of voltage across the conductor to the current flowing through the conductor. • Resistancecan be thought of as a conducting material that alters the flow of charge carriers through the circuit. • Resistors can be • light bulbs • appliances • a new material • SI unit is called an ohm. • Denoted • R • Symbol • Ω • Symbol in a circuit is:

  7. Ohm’s Law I V = R • Georg Simon Ohm (1787-1854) found that for many materials, including most metals, the resistance of the material is constant over a wide range of voltages. • That is Ohm’s Law in theory • During his experiments, he noticed that the relationship between current and voltage were proportional to one another in an ohmic material. • An ohmic material is one in which the resistance remains constant. • Since the resistance is constant, the relationship between voltage and current is written in the more useful form of Ohm’s Law:

  8. Resistivity l  R = A • With Ohm’s discovery that the resistance is constant for a material under any voltage, that brings about the question: • Is the resistance the same for every material? • The answer is that the every material has its own, unique ability to resist charge flow. • That ability to resist charge flow is the resistivity, , characteristic of the material. • The resistivity of a material is: • proportionalto its length, l. • longer distance means more time for charge to slow down • inversely proportional to its area, A. • two lane highway versus a four lane highway

  9. Temperature v Resistance • In general, the resistivity of a material increases as temperatureincreases. • This is due to the atoms inside the material becoming more excited from the increased kinetic energy. • The extra excitement causes them to vibrate faster, which creates more collisions with the charge carriers as they attempt to pass through. • Each material has a different rate at which temperature can excite its atoms. • Remember the specific heatcapacity concept! • Thus we must account for this difference in the form of the temperature coefficient of resistivity, .

  10. Superconductors • There are some metals and other compounds whose resistances fall to virtually zero when they are cooled. • When cooled such that their temperature falls below the critical temperature, Tc, the resistance of the material becomes next to nothing. • These materials are called superconductors. • They include metals such as Al, Sn, Pb, Zn, Hg, In, Nb. • Copper, silver, and gold are great conductors but do not exhibit the properties of a superconductor. • An interesting phenomenon of superconductors is that once a current is established in them, the current will persist without any applied voltage. • This has lead to extensive research to find a superconductor with a critical temperature in a moderate range to allow for technology to exist in our lives that can power themselves!

  11. Grounded Circuit • Quite often a circuit is grounded to ensure a complete transfer of charge from the positive terminal. • Most house circuits are grounded as a safety precaution so that any excess charge goes to the ground and not back into the circuit where it does not belong and may do damage. • For calculation purposes, a grounded location allows us to identify a place where PE = 0 J. • The symbol in a circuit for a ground is: - +

  12. Electrical Power • Recall the definition of power is the rate at which work is performed. • P = W/t • Thanks to the Work-Kinetic Energy Theorem: • W = KE • And Conservation of Energy states: • KE = PE • And the electrical potential energy can be found by: • PE = qV • So the total power used during a transfer of electrical energy is: • P = QV/t • And the amount of charge transferred in a unit of time is defined as the current. • P = (Q/t)V = IV • By using Ohm’s Law to incorporate resistance we get • P = I2R • If the voltage is unknown • P = (V)2 / R • If the current is unknown

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