Electricity Concepts Flashcards
Electricity
- Importance of Electricity
- Essential in modern society.
- Controllable and convenient energy source for homes, schools, hospitals, and industries.
- Key Questions
- What constitutes electricity?
- How does it flow in an electric circuit?
- What factors regulate current in a circuit?
- Discuss the heating effect of electric current.
11.1 Electric Current and Circuit
- Definition of Electric Current
- Similar to air or water currents; constitutes flow of electric charge through a conductor (e.g., metallic wire).
- Example: In a torch, batteries provide flow of charges or electric current to the bulb.
- A switch makes a conducting link between source and load. A closed path is called an electric circuit.
- Current flows only when the circuit is closed; if broken (open circuit), current stops.
- Expressing Electric Current
- Current ( C) is defined as the amount of charge ( Q) passing through a cross-section of the conductor in time ( t):
I = rac{Q}{t}
- Units of Current
- SI Unit: Ampere (A), where 1 A = 1 C/s.
- Subunits: milliampere (1 mA = 10^-3 A), microampere (1 µA = 10^-6 A).
- Tool to measure current: Ammeter, connected in series.
- Example Calculation:
- Current through a bulb:
Given: I = 0.5 A, t = 10 min = 600 s.
Calculation: Q = It = 0.5 imes 600 = 300 C
11.2 Electric Potential and Potential Difference
- What causes electric charge flow?
- Analogy: Water flows in a pipe due to pressure difference. Similarly, charges flow due to potential difference in a conductor.
- Potential Difference: Generated by batteries, sets charges in motion.
- Definition:
V = rac{W}{Q}
- Where W = work done to move a unit charge Q.
- Units of Potential Difference
- Volt (V): 1 V = 1 J/C.
- Measured using a voltmeter, which is connected in parallel.
- Example Calculation:
- Work done in moving charge of 2 C across 12 V:
W = VQ = 12 imes 2 = 24 J
11.3 Circuit Diagram
- Components:
- Cell (battery), plug key, electrical components, connecting wires.
- Symbols for Circuit Diagram:
- Electric Cell, Battery, Switch (open/closed), Wire Joint, etc.
11.4 Ohm’s Law
- Concept: Relationship between voltage (V) and current (I) through a conductor.
- Observed by Georg Simon Ohm.
- Ohm's Law:
V ext{ is proportional to } I
or
V = IR - Resistance (R):
- Proportional to length (l) and inversely proportional to area of cross-section (A).
- Formula:
$$ R =
ho rac{l}{A} $$
where \rho is resistivity ($ ext{ in } ext{ } ext{ } ext{ } ext{ } ext{ } ext{ } ext{ } ext{ }\Omega m $y).
- Example Calculations:
- Current I from a 220 V source with R = 1200 Ω:
I = rac{220}{1200} = 0.18 A - Similarly for a 100 Ω heater:
I = rac{220}{100} = 2.2 A
11.5 Factors Affecting Resistance
- Factors:
- Length of conductor: Longer = Higher Resistance (R ∝ l).
- Cross-sectional area: Thicker = Lower Resistance (R ∝ 1/A).
- Material: Different materials have different resistivities.
- Resistivity Values:
- Conductors (e.g., Silver, Copper), Alloys (e.g., Nichrome), Insulators (e.g., Rubber, Glass).
- Example: Given R = 26 Ω, find wire resistivity and material based on diameter.
11.6 Resistance of a System of Resistors
Series Connection:
- Same current flows through all.
- Total resistance:
Rs = R1 + R2 + … + Rn
Parallel Connection:
- Voltage across all is same.
- Total current:
rac{1}{Rp} = rac{1}{R1} + rac{1}{R2} + … + rac{1}{Rn}
11.7 Heating Effect of Electric Current
- Energy Dissipation:
- Heat produced (Joule’s law):
H = I^2 R t
- Applications:
- Used in electric heaters, irons, light bulbs, etc.
- Example:
An electric iron consumes 840 W (max) at 220 V; find current and resistance.
11.8 Electric Power
- Definition: Rate of doing work:
P = VI = I^2R = rac{V^2}{R} - Units: Watt (W) = 1 J/s, Kilowatt (kW).
- Energy Calculation: Consumed energy = Power × Time (kWh).
Summary of Key Takeaways:
- Electric current is expressed in amperes.
- Potential difference in volts is what sets charges in motion.
- Ohm's law describes the direct relationship between voltage and current.
- Resistance is influenced by the conductor's length, area, and material.
- Heating effect of electric current is utilized in various appliances.
- Electric power is defined in terms of voltage, current, and resistance, with practical applications in energy consumption.