1 / 9

Section 3—Electrical Energy

Section 3—Electrical Energy. To use electrical energy, a complete circuit must be made Series Circuit —current has only one loop to flow through *Used in flashlights and some holiday lights. (Circuit types continued).

hy
Download Presentation

Section 3—Electrical Energy

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. Section 3—Electrical Energy • To use electrical energy, a complete circuit must be made • SeriesCircuit—current has only one loop to flow through *Used in flashlights and some holiday lights

  2. (Circuit types continued) • Opencircuit—when any part of a series circuit is disconnected, no current flows through the circuit • Ex: when 1 X-mas bulb is out, the whole string is out!!

  3. Parallel Circuits • Parallelcircuits—contain two or more branches for current to move through. • Advantages: • When one branch of the circuit is opened, the current continues to flow through other branches • Ex: rooms in houses, cars, etc. • Fig. 18 on pg. 210

  4. Household Circuits • In most homes, wiring is organized and logically connected • Wiring is hidden behind walls, under floors, etc. • Standard voltage difference in US is 120 V • There is a main switch and circuit breaker/fuse box for homes • Parallel circuits branch out to rooms/appliances

  5. (more on household circuits) • Many houses draw current from the same circuit • As the amount of current increases, so does the amount of heating in the wires • If wires get too hot, insulation melts and bare wires can cause a fire • For protection, homes have fuses or a circuit breaker

  6. Fuses and Circuit Breakers • Fuses—small pieces of metal that melt if current becomes too high, and causes a break in the circuit, current flow stops • Circuitbreaker—contains a switch to flip and open the circuit, stopping the flow of current/usually can be reset by moving switch to its “on” position

  7. Electrical Power • Electrical power—the rate at which electrical energy is converted to another form of energy • Used by appliances/varies • Calculating Power: POWER = CURRENT X VOLTAGE DIFFERENCE OR P(watts) = I (amperes) X V (volts)

  8. Electrical Energy • The amount of electrical energy you use depends on two things: • Power required by appliances in your home • How long the appliances are used • Calculating Energy: • ENERGY = POWER x TIME OR • E(kWh) = P (kW) x T(h)

  9. Kilowatt Hours • Kilowatt-hour = the unit of electrical energy One kilowatt= 1,000 Watts SECTION REVIEW QUESTIONS

More Related