Physics - Electricity Lessons 1-12
Physics - Electricity Lessons 1-12
Lesson 1 - Static electricity
Electrostatics
Study of static electric charge
All matter is made up of extremely tiny particles called atoms
Atoms are made up of three subatomic particles
Protons with a positive charge
Neutrons with a neutral charge
Electrons with a negative charge but also can be transferred
Atom
Neutral atom
6 electrons shown
No electric charge
Thus 6 protons
May form an ion
Gain electrons which are negative
Anion
Lose electrons that are positive
Cation
Static electricity
A stationary electric charge
Created when the atoms make up an object gain or lose electrons
Become ions
Electric charges
Positive charge
Attracts negative and neutral objects
Negative charge
Attracts positive and neutral charge
Neutral or uncharged
Attracts positive and negative objects
Law of electric charges
Like charges repel one another
Unlike charges attract one another
Creating an electrostatic charge (3 ways)
Friction
Direct contact
Induction
Transferring electrical charges
Friction
An object rubs against another transferring object charge
Example- rubbing a balloon with a piece of silk
Tendency to be static
An electric charge that stays where the friction occurred on the charged object
Direct contact
Object touches another transferring charge
Example- a negatively charged person touching a neutral door knob
Charging by induction- temporary
A charged object approaches a neutral object
Causing the similar charge in the neutral object to move in an opposing direction
Thus causing a temporary charge
For example - a negatively charged balloon approaches a neutral charged wall
The electrostatic series
List of objects or materials ranking their ability to lose electrons
The higher on the list the object is more likely to lose electrons
To become positively charged
Friction between objects causes the transfer of electrons
Example
If you rub together a rubber balloon and your hair, how will electrons travel
Since hair is higher on the list it will lose electrons
Hair is positive
Balloon is negative
human skin
leather
rabbit fur
glass
quartz
hair
nylon
wool
cat fur
silk
aluminum
paper
cotton
steel
wood
amber
copper
silver
gold
polystyrene
cellophane
PVC
silicone
Teflon
rubber
Insulator
Electrons are trapped on individual atoms
If you add electrons to the atoms they will stay there
Removed only by contact with materials less likely to hold electrons
Conductor
Electrons can move freely between atoms on the object
When electrons are added they will flow through the object to the area of the greatest positive character
Used as grounds
Ground wire
Allows electrons to enter or leave to neutralize object
Conductors
Good: silver, copper, gold, aluminum, magnesium, tungsten, nickel, mercury, platinum, iron
Fair: graphite (carbon), nichrome, the human body, damp skin, acid solutions, saltwater, Earth, water vapour
Lesson 2 - Charging by friction
Charging
Unequal number of positive and negative charges
Charging by friction
Transferring an electric charge from one substance to another by rubbing action
Example- walking across carpet wearing socks
Review - Atomic structure
Protons say in the nucleus
They don’t move
Electrons are free to move
They can be transferred to different objects
Example- coming hair with a plastic comb
Electrons were transferred while protons stayed in their original positions
The comb had a stronger attraction for electrons than hair
Electrostatic series
Can be used to determine the kind of electric charge produces when two substances are rubbed together
Chart of electrostatic series
How does it work?
The top of the list has a weaker hold on electrons
The objects want to give away their electrons
Electrons are negatively charged
If the object gives away negative it becomes positively charged
The bottom of the list has a stronger hold on electrons
Objects want to keep their electrons
They will attract any other electros from other objects with weaker abilities
Electrons are negatively charged if it adds more to it then it will stay as negatively charged
For example - if silk and acetate are rubbed together
Silk has a stronger hold on electrons
Electrons are transferred from the acetate to the silk
Lesson 3 - Insulator and conductors
Insulators
Is a substance in which electrons cannot move freely from atom to atom
Gains electrons it becomes negatively charged
The charge will continue to build-up
Used to protect us from electric shock
Examples of insulators
Oil
Wood
Glass
Plastic
Rubber
Conductor
Is a substance in which electrons move freely from one atom to another
If the conductor is charged with extra electrons
They will move freely along the conductor
Examples of conductors
Copper
Aluminum
Gold
Platinum
Saltwater
Human body
A good insulator is a poor conductor
Example - wires
Conductor = aluminum or copper wire
Insulator = rubber or plastic layer
Discharging objects
Objects can become charged with excess electrons
When electrons are removed from the object
They are discharged or neutralized
Several ways of doing this
Grounding - once connected to the earth, the earth can take all extra electrons
Rapid grounding results in sparks
Discharge at the point - electrons repelled until they reach a point and repelled into air
Lesson 4 - Current Electricity and Circuits
What is current electricity
Static electricity
Electrons build up in one place
Move randomly
Can travel short distances by discharge
Current electricity
Electrons flow through a conductor
Move-in a controlled way
Can travel long distances
Electron flow in a conductor
For an electron to flow, a source of energy is needed
Example - battery
When it is charged, electrons will flow
When it is dead, electrons don’t flow
Conductors and insulators
Conductors
Materials that allow electrons to flow easily
Examples-
Metals
Saltwater
People
Animals
Insulators
Materials that don’t let electrons flow easily
Examples -
Rubber
Plastic
Fabric
Glass
Wool
Wood
Electric circuits
Is a continuous path for electrons to flow
Example- electrically moving through a wire
Incomplete circuit/ open circuit
Complete circuit/ closed circuit
Components of a circuit
The simple circuit consists of…
Source
Connectors
Control devices
Loads
Sources
The energy source is the beginning of the electric circuit pathway
Gives electrons a push
Electrons leave through the negative end of the source
It will return to the positive end
Basically, they will go in a circle!
Connectors
Are conductors such as wires
Usually made of copper and aluminum
Join all parts of an electric circuit together
Control devices
Manage the flow of electrons
Example - switch for a light bulb
Switch is ON
Circuit is closed
Complete path for electrons flow
Energy lights up the light bulb
Switch is OFF
Circuit is open
Incomplete path for electron flow
Bulb will not light up
Loads
Is a device that transforms electrical energy into other usable forms of energy
Examples
Light bulb - light energy
Heater - heat energy
Speaker - sound energy
Fan - mechanical energy
Short circuit
Occurs when the electric current has found a shorter path to return the source without going through an appropriate load
This causes the battery to become dangerously hot
Could cause the battery to burst
Sources of electrical energy
Comes from different sources
Electric cells
Portable devices that convert chemical energy into electrical energy
Example - batteries
Non-rechargeable is called primary cells
When chemical reactions stop, the battery is dead
Rechargeable is called secondary cells
These batteries last much longer than primary cells
Fuel cells
Special kind of electric cell that continually produces electricity along as a fuel source is provided
Example - hydrogen
Electric VS fuel cell vehicles
Electric vehicles
Energy is stored in batteries to power one or more electric motors
Fuel cell vehicles
Hydrogen is stored in a fuel cell in the car
Reacts with oxygen from the air to create electricity
Lesson 5 - Series and parallel circuits
Circuit diagrams
Is a way of drawing an electric circuit using standard symbols
Negative and positive signs are used to identify the two terminals of an energy source
Cell vs battery
Cell
Is a single unit that converts chemical energy into electrical energy
Battery
Is a collection of cells
9 volt battery is actually a collection of 6 1.5 volt cells wrapped together
Series vs parallel circuits
Most circuits are used in everyday life have more than one load
The loads may be connected in 2 ways
Series circuits
Loads are connected in a chain that forms a loop
Electrons flow one path
Loads are connected one after the other in a chain that forms a continuous loop
All electrical devices must be on or off at the same time
Example - flashlights, cordless tools
Parallel circuits
Loads are connected on different branches of wires
Electrons flow in more than one way
Loads are on at least 2 different branches of wires that connect to an energy source
Each electrical device can be on or off with the same circuit
Examples - household wiring, stereo speakers
Series or parallel
A good example of examining circuit types is to remove 1 Christmas tree bulb from a string of lights
If the entire string of lights goes off
Is a series circuit
If remaining lights stay on after one is removed
Parallel circuit
Simple circuit diagrams
The switch can go anywhere as long as it makes sense
The battery can go anywhere but keep it on the outside for parallel circuits
Certain types of batteries are called dry cells
Lesson 6 - Electric current
Electric current
For any electrical device to operate
There must be a flow of electrons
When electrons flow through a conductor
It is said to constitute an electric current
Electric current is the rate of electron flow in a circuit
The faster the electric charges travel through the conductor
The greater the current
Electric current is measured in amperes (amps)
Measuring current
When an electrical circuit stops working
An electrician is called
Electrician use an ammeter to measure the current flowing through different loads on a circuit
Ammeter
Must be connected in series with a load to measure the current flowing through the loads
Ensures that all the electrons that flow through the load (ex. lamp) will also flow through it
Safety with electric current
Very large currents can damage ;electrical devices
Causing a electrical fire
This is why every home has a distribution panel with circuit breakers
Fuses in older homes
Too much current going through the circuit breaker causes it to trip
Behave like an open switch so that no current can flow through it
Lesson 7 - Potential difference
Potential energy
Is the stored energy an object has because of its position or state
Examples
Bicycle on top of a hill
Book held over your head
Stretched elastic band
Kinetic energy
Is the energy of motion
When potential energy is used it is converted into kinetic energy
You can think of potential energy as kinetic energy waiting to happen
Model of potential energy
For centuries people have used the energy of falling water to push waterwheels
Is possible
Water above the wheel has more gravitational potential energy than it does below the wheel
As the water falls, it moves from an area of high potential energy to an area of low potential energy
Potential difference
Similar to the flow of water
Electric charges will flow from a point of higher potential to a point of lower potential
This difference in electric potential between 2 points in a circuit is known as the potential difference
We often refer to potential difference as voltage
Electron flow in a battery
In battery
Electrons flow from the negative electrode ( higher potential energy) to the positive electrode (lower potential energy)
Measuring potential difference
When an electrician, technician, or engineer troubleshoots a circuit
The voltage, as well as the current at different parts of the circuit, must be measured
A voltmeter is used to measure potential difference
Voltmeter vs ammeter
The voltmeter must be connected in parallel with a load or an energy source
The ammeter must be connected in series
The reason for this is voltage is relative to two points
There is always a drop in voltage across a load or energy source
Example
To measure the voltage across the lamp in the figure shown
Connect the voltmeter in parallel with the lamp
The negative side of the battery is connected to the negative side of the voltmeter
Lesson 8 - Resistance
Resistance in circuits
Is the opposite of electrical conductivity
Is the ability of a material to resist the flow of electrons as they move through a circuit
Uses the symbol R for resistance
Is measured in ohms (Ω)
Model for resistance
Example of kicking a soccer ball
If the ball is on a smooth, hard surface like pavement the ball will roll easily
If the ball is on a rough surface like tall grass, you would have to kick the ball much harder just to make it roll
In the same way
Electrons flow through a material that might be smooth or rough
Internal resistance
All materials have some of this
Greater resistance lowers the current
The warmer the material becomes when current flows through it
This happens because
Electrons move through the material they bump into the atoms that make up the material
The material becomes warm because electrical energy is being converted into thermal energy
Many devices that we use everyday use materials with high internal resistance
Example- toaster consists of nichrome wires
Which have a high internal resistance
The electrical energy through the wires gets converted into light (the red glow) and thermal energy
Thermal energy is what toasts the bread
Factors that affect resistance
Type of material
Materials are good conductors have a low internal resistance
Example - copper wire, electrons flow freely
Thickness of material
Thicker the conducting wire, the more room for electrons to flow, less internal resistance
Length of material
The longer the wire, the greater the internal resistance, the electrons have to travel through more material
Temperature of material
Resistance increases as temperature increases
Resistance in circuits
When electrons move through an electrical circuit
They meet up with a load (ex. light bulb) causing resistance
Tries to stop the flow of electrons
Resistance from the bulb converts the electric current into heat energy
Filament becomes so hot that it glows
Conversion of energy causes electrons to lose much of their energy
Is called voltage drop
Voltage is lost or dropped across a conductor
Measuring resistance
Just as current and voltage are useful quantities to measure when troubleshooting a circuit, so is resistance
Ohmmeter measure resistance
Ohmmeters are placed in parallel with a load
Resistors in circuit
The resistor is any electrical device that reduces the current in a circuit
Examples
Dimmer switches
3-way lamps
Volume controls on stereos
Internet modems
Cell phones
Lesson 9 - Ohm's law
Ohm's law
Is the mathematical relationship between the current, potential difference (voltage) and resistance
Ohm’s law states
If the voltage increases, the current increases
If the resistance decreases, the current increases
V is the voltage
I is the current
R is the resistance
How does it work
An electric circuit is formed when a conductive path is created to allow free electrons to continuously move
Force that is motivating the flow of electrons is called voltage
It is a specific measure of potential energy that is always relative between two points
Free electrons tend to move through conductors with some degree of friction, or opposition to motion called resistance
Applying ohm’s law
Using this law we are able to analyze electric circuits
If you know any two values, you can analyze the third one
Lesson 10 - Kirchhoff's laws
Total resistance
If you have a circuit with 1 load the total resistance of the circuit will be different than if you have 2 or more of those loads connected in series or parallel
The current flowing through a circuit with multiple loads will be less than the current flowing through a circuit with 1 load
Adding more loads to a circuit increases the total resistance of the circuit
This affects the intensity of light bulbs in the circuit
As more bulbs are added, the dimmer the light bulbs will glow because there is less current going to each bulb
However, all the bulbs in each arrangement will glow the same
Kirchhoff’s laws
These laws explain the relationship between current, voltage, and resistance, as they apply to series and parallel circuits
Current law
All current that enters a loop, exit that loop
Voltage law
The sum of the voltage within a loop equals the voltage at the source
Series circuit
No matter how many loads are connected in series, there is only one path that the current can follow
If one light bulb goes out, the remaining light bulbs go out
Series circuit - current
Current is the same between any 2 points measured total = I1 = I2 = I3, where I is the current measured in amps.
Series circuit - voltage
The voltage at the course will equal the sum of the voltages across all loads
Vtotal = V1 + V2 + V3 , where V is the voltage measured in volts.
Math formulas
It is easier to simplify these formulas when using then in tactical applications
You will have to rearrange the formulas as needed for each circuit problem
Example for series circuit - math
Parallel circuit
When you connect loads in parallel, there are multiple paths the current can follow
If one light bulb goes out, the remaining light bulbs stay lit
Parallel circuit - current
The current is the sum of all current at each junction
Itotal = I1 + I2 + I3, where "I" is the current measured in amps.
Parallel circuit - voltage
The voltage at the course will be the same across all loads
Vtotal = V1 = V2 = V3 , where V is the voltage measured in volts.
Math formulas
Is it easier to simplify these formulas when using them in practical applications?
You will have to rearrange the formulas as needed for each circuit problem
Lesson 11 - Current and voltage analogies
Electric current
Is the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit
Current can be compared to the flow of water in a river
Series circuit
The rate of flow is the same anywhere throughout the circuit
Parallel circuit
The rate of flow along every parallel path adds up to the rate of flow at the battery
Voltage
Is the potential to do work
Can be compared to the amount of money you have to spend
Series circuit
The volts are shared throughout the whole circuit. For example, if a battery produces 20 Volts, every light on the circuit must share that potential energy. Similarly, if you have $20, you have to spend a little of it at every store you visit (and return home with no extra money). This means all lights will be relatively dull because they are all sharing the volts
Parallel circuit
Each pathway gets the same amount of voltage because the electrons can only take one path. Similarly, if you have $20 each pathway gets $20 and it does not need to be shared. This means all lights will be very bright
Lesson 12 - Energy at home
Electrical power
Is the rate at which electrical energy is produced or consumed in a given time
Unit of measurement for electrical power is the watt (W)
One watt is the equivalent of one joule per second (J/s)
Higher the power rating value, or wattage the more electrical energy a device produces (or uses to operate)
Light bulbs and power
Consider a 60 W incandescent light bulb and a 15 W compact fluorescent bulb (CFL)
The incandescent bulb uses more electrical energy than the CFL bulb to produce light
Each produced about the same amount of light
In the incandescent bulb has extra energy
It turns it into thermal energy instead of light
Measuring electrical energy
Joule is a relatively small unit of electrical energy so we often measure larger amounts of electrical energy
Kilowatt-hour is the SI unit used to measure energy usage
It is the use of one kilowatt of power for 1 hour
Electrical meters keep track of how much electrical energy is used in home, schools, and businesses in units of kWh
Transfer of energy
Total energy that goes into a device is always equal to the energy that goes out
Energy going into an electrical device is called energy input
Energy going out of the electrical device can be both useful energy and wasted energy
Energy efficiency
Useful energy is the energy we want the device to produce
In a light bulb, this would be light energy
Wasted energy is energy lost to its surroundings which are thermal
Efficiency refers to how well the electrical energy is changed into useful energy by a device
The energy efficiency of this incandescent light bulb is only 5%
Energuide and energy star
all households appliances are sold with an Energuide label which estimated how much electrical energy appliances use
Some appliances are labelled with the energy star symbol which indicated that a product meets or exceeds high-efficiency standards
Energy-efficient homes
Our houses need to be heated in the winter and cooled in the summer
We turn lights on and off
We use appliances
Electrical usage in the home costs money (sometimes a lot)
Newer homes are built more energy efficient
It Helps reduces electrical costs by reducing the amount of energy required to operate the home
Make a home energy efficient
Calculating efficiency
The higher the percentage, the more efficient the device is
Can calculate the efficiency of a device using equation
Percent efficiency = energy out/energy in x 100%
Physics - Electricity Lessons 1-12
Lesson 1 - Static electricity
Electrostatics
Study of static electric charge
All matter is made up of extremely tiny particles called atoms
Atoms are made up of three subatomic particles
Protons with a positive charge
Neutrons with a neutral charge
Electrons with a negative charge but also can be transferred
Atom
Neutral atom
6 electrons shown
No electric charge
Thus 6 protons
May form an ion
Gain electrons which are negative
Anion
Lose electrons that are positive
Cation
Static electricity
A stationary electric charge
Created when the atoms make up an object gain or lose electrons
Become ions
Electric charges
Positive charge
Attracts negative and neutral objects
Negative charge
Attracts positive and neutral charge
Neutral or uncharged
Attracts positive and negative objects
Law of electric charges
Like charges repel one another
Unlike charges attract one another
Creating an electrostatic charge (3 ways)
Friction
Direct contact
Induction
Transferring electrical charges
Friction
An object rubs against another transferring object charge
Example- rubbing a balloon with a piece of silk
Tendency to be static
An electric charge that stays where the friction occurred on the charged object
Direct contact
Object touches another transferring charge
Example- a negatively charged person touching a neutral door knob
Charging by induction- temporary
A charged object approaches a neutral object
Causing the similar charge in the neutral object to move in an opposing direction
Thus causing a temporary charge
For example - a negatively charged balloon approaches a neutral charged wall
The electrostatic series
List of objects or materials ranking their ability to lose electrons
The higher on the list the object is more likely to lose electrons
To become positively charged
Friction between objects causes the transfer of electrons
Example
If you rub together a rubber balloon and your hair, how will electrons travel
Since hair is higher on the list it will lose electrons
Hair is positive
Balloon is negative
human skin
leather
rabbit fur
glass
quartz
hair
nylon
wool
cat fur
silk
aluminum
paper
cotton
steel
wood
amber
copper
silver
gold
polystyrene
cellophane
PVC
silicone
Teflon
rubber
Insulator
Electrons are trapped on individual atoms
If you add electrons to the atoms they will stay there
Removed only by contact with materials less likely to hold electrons
Conductor
Electrons can move freely between atoms on the object
When electrons are added they will flow through the object to the area of the greatest positive character
Used as grounds
Ground wire
Allows electrons to enter or leave to neutralize object
Conductors
Good: silver, copper, gold, aluminum, magnesium, tungsten, nickel, mercury, platinum, iron
Fair: graphite (carbon), nichrome, the human body, damp skin, acid solutions, saltwater, Earth, water vapour
Lesson 2 - Charging by friction
Charging
Unequal number of positive and negative charges
Charging by friction
Transferring an electric charge from one substance to another by rubbing action
Example- walking across carpet wearing socks
Review - Atomic structure
Protons say in the nucleus
They don’t move
Electrons are free to move
They can be transferred to different objects
Example- coming hair with a plastic comb
Electrons were transferred while protons stayed in their original positions
The comb had a stronger attraction for electrons than hair
Electrostatic series
Can be used to determine the kind of electric charge produces when two substances are rubbed together
Chart of electrostatic series
How does it work?
The top of the list has a weaker hold on electrons
The objects want to give away their electrons
Electrons are negatively charged
If the object gives away negative it becomes positively charged
The bottom of the list has a stronger hold on electrons
Objects want to keep their electrons
They will attract any other electros from other objects with weaker abilities
Electrons are negatively charged if it adds more to it then it will stay as negatively charged
For example - if silk and acetate are rubbed together
Silk has a stronger hold on electrons
Electrons are transferred from the acetate to the silk
Lesson 3 - Insulator and conductors
Insulators
Is a substance in which electrons cannot move freely from atom to atom
Gains electrons it becomes negatively charged
The charge will continue to build-up
Used to protect us from electric shock
Examples of insulators
Oil
Wood
Glass
Plastic
Rubber
Conductor
Is a substance in which electrons move freely from one atom to another
If the conductor is charged with extra electrons
They will move freely along the conductor
Examples of conductors
Copper
Aluminum
Gold
Platinum
Saltwater
Human body
A good insulator is a poor conductor
Example - wires
Conductor = aluminum or copper wire
Insulator = rubber or plastic layer
Discharging objects
Objects can become charged with excess electrons
When electrons are removed from the object
They are discharged or neutralized
Several ways of doing this
Grounding - once connected to the earth, the earth can take all extra electrons
Rapid grounding results in sparks
Discharge at the point - electrons repelled until they reach a point and repelled into air
Lesson 4 - Current Electricity and Circuits
What is current electricity
Static electricity
Electrons build up in one place
Move randomly
Can travel short distances by discharge
Current electricity
Electrons flow through a conductor
Move-in a controlled way
Can travel long distances
Electron flow in a conductor
For an electron to flow, a source of energy is needed
Example - battery
When it is charged, electrons will flow
When it is dead, electrons don’t flow
Conductors and insulators
Conductors
Materials that allow electrons to flow easily
Examples-
Metals
Saltwater
People
Animals
Insulators
Materials that don’t let electrons flow easily
Examples -
Rubber
Plastic
Fabric
Glass
Wool
Wood
Electric circuits
Is a continuous path for electrons to flow
Example- electrically moving through a wire
Incomplete circuit/ open circuit
Complete circuit/ closed circuit
Components of a circuit
The simple circuit consists of…
Source
Connectors
Control devices
Loads
Sources
The energy source is the beginning of the electric circuit pathway
Gives electrons a push
Electrons leave through the negative end of the source
It will return to the positive end
Basically, they will go in a circle!
Connectors
Are conductors such as wires
Usually made of copper and aluminum
Join all parts of an electric circuit together
Control devices
Manage the flow of electrons
Example - switch for a light bulb
Switch is ON
Circuit is closed
Complete path for electrons flow
Energy lights up the light bulb
Switch is OFF
Circuit is open
Incomplete path for electron flow
Bulb will not light up
Loads
Is a device that transforms electrical energy into other usable forms of energy
Examples
Light bulb - light energy
Heater - heat energy
Speaker - sound energy
Fan - mechanical energy
Short circuit
Occurs when the electric current has found a shorter path to return the source without going through an appropriate load
This causes the battery to become dangerously hot
Could cause the battery to burst
Sources of electrical energy
Comes from different sources
Electric cells
Portable devices that convert chemical energy into electrical energy
Example - batteries
Non-rechargeable is called primary cells
When chemical reactions stop, the battery is dead
Rechargeable is called secondary cells
These batteries last much longer than primary cells
Fuel cells
Special kind of electric cell that continually produces electricity along as a fuel source is provided
Example - hydrogen
Electric VS fuel cell vehicles
Electric vehicles
Energy is stored in batteries to power one or more electric motors
Fuel cell vehicles
Hydrogen is stored in a fuel cell in the car
Reacts with oxygen from the air to create electricity
Lesson 5 - Series and parallel circuits
Circuit diagrams
Is a way of drawing an electric circuit using standard symbols
Negative and positive signs are used to identify the two terminals of an energy source
Cell vs battery
Cell
Is a single unit that converts chemical energy into electrical energy
Battery
Is a collection of cells
9 volt battery is actually a collection of 6 1.5 volt cells wrapped together
Series vs parallel circuits
Most circuits are used in everyday life have more than one load
The loads may be connected in 2 ways
Series circuits
Loads are connected in a chain that forms a loop
Electrons flow one path
Loads are connected one after the other in a chain that forms a continuous loop
All electrical devices must be on or off at the same time
Example - flashlights, cordless tools
Parallel circuits
Loads are connected on different branches of wires
Electrons flow in more than one way
Loads are on at least 2 different branches of wires that connect to an energy source
Each electrical device can be on or off with the same circuit
Examples - household wiring, stereo speakers
Series or parallel
A good example of examining circuit types is to remove 1 Christmas tree bulb from a string of lights
If the entire string of lights goes off
Is a series circuit
If remaining lights stay on after one is removed
Parallel circuit
Simple circuit diagrams
The switch can go anywhere as long as it makes sense
The battery can go anywhere but keep it on the outside for parallel circuits
Certain types of batteries are called dry cells
Lesson 6 - Electric current
Electric current
For any electrical device to operate
There must be a flow of electrons
When electrons flow through a conductor
It is said to constitute an electric current
Electric current is the rate of electron flow in a circuit
The faster the electric charges travel through the conductor
The greater the current
Electric current is measured in amperes (amps)
Measuring current
When an electrical circuit stops working
An electrician is called
Electrician use an ammeter to measure the current flowing through different loads on a circuit
Ammeter
Must be connected in series with a load to measure the current flowing through the loads
Ensures that all the electrons that flow through the load (ex. lamp) will also flow through it
Safety with electric current
Very large currents can damage ;electrical devices
Causing a electrical fire
This is why every home has a distribution panel with circuit breakers
Fuses in older homes
Too much current going through the circuit breaker causes it to trip
Behave like an open switch so that no current can flow through it
Lesson 7 - Potential difference
Potential energy
Is the stored energy an object has because of its position or state
Examples
Bicycle on top of a hill
Book held over your head
Stretched elastic band
Kinetic energy
Is the energy of motion
When potential energy is used it is converted into kinetic energy
You can think of potential energy as kinetic energy waiting to happen
Model of potential energy
For centuries people have used the energy of falling water to push waterwheels
Is possible
Water above the wheel has more gravitational potential energy than it does below the wheel
As the water falls, it moves from an area of high potential energy to an area of low potential energy
Potential difference
Similar to the flow of water
Electric charges will flow from a point of higher potential to a point of lower potential
This difference in electric potential between 2 points in a circuit is known as the potential difference
We often refer to potential difference as voltage
Electron flow in a battery
In battery
Electrons flow from the negative electrode ( higher potential energy) to the positive electrode (lower potential energy)
Measuring potential difference
When an electrician, technician, or engineer troubleshoots a circuit
The voltage, as well as the current at different parts of the circuit, must be measured
A voltmeter is used to measure potential difference
Voltmeter vs ammeter
The voltmeter must be connected in parallel with a load or an energy source
The ammeter must be connected in series
The reason for this is voltage is relative to two points
There is always a drop in voltage across a load or energy source
Example
To measure the voltage across the lamp in the figure shown
Connect the voltmeter in parallel with the lamp
The negative side of the battery is connected to the negative side of the voltmeter
Lesson 8 - Resistance
Resistance in circuits
Is the opposite of electrical conductivity
Is the ability of a material to resist the flow of electrons as they move through a circuit
Uses the symbol R for resistance
Is measured in ohms (Ω)
Model for resistance
Example of kicking a soccer ball
If the ball is on a smooth, hard surface like pavement the ball will roll easily
If the ball is on a rough surface like tall grass, you would have to kick the ball much harder just to make it roll
In the same way
Electrons flow through a material that might be smooth or rough
Internal resistance
All materials have some of this
Greater resistance lowers the current
The warmer the material becomes when current flows through it
This happens because
Electrons move through the material they bump into the atoms that make up the material
The material becomes warm because electrical energy is being converted into thermal energy
Many devices that we use everyday use materials with high internal resistance
Example- toaster consists of nichrome wires
Which have a high internal resistance
The electrical energy through the wires gets converted into light (the red glow) and thermal energy
Thermal energy is what toasts the bread
Factors that affect resistance
Type of material
Materials are good conductors have a low internal resistance
Example - copper wire, electrons flow freely
Thickness of material
Thicker the conducting wire, the more room for electrons to flow, less internal resistance
Length of material
The longer the wire, the greater the internal resistance, the electrons have to travel through more material
Temperature of material
Resistance increases as temperature increases
Resistance in circuits
When electrons move through an electrical circuit
They meet up with a load (ex. light bulb) causing resistance
Tries to stop the flow of electrons
Resistance from the bulb converts the electric current into heat energy
Filament becomes so hot that it glows
Conversion of energy causes electrons to lose much of their energy
Is called voltage drop
Voltage is lost or dropped across a conductor
Measuring resistance
Just as current and voltage are useful quantities to measure when troubleshooting a circuit, so is resistance
Ohmmeter measure resistance
Ohmmeters are placed in parallel with a load
Resistors in circuit
The resistor is any electrical device that reduces the current in a circuit
Examples
Dimmer switches
3-way lamps
Volume controls on stereos
Internet modems
Cell phones
Lesson 9 - Ohm's law
Ohm's law
Is the mathematical relationship between the current, potential difference (voltage) and resistance
Ohm’s law states
If the voltage increases, the current increases
If the resistance decreases, the current increases
V is the voltage
I is the current
R is the resistance
How does it work
An electric circuit is formed when a conductive path is created to allow free electrons to continuously move
Force that is motivating the flow of electrons is called voltage
It is a specific measure of potential energy that is always relative between two points
Free electrons tend to move through conductors with some degree of friction, or opposition to motion called resistance
Applying ohm’s law
Using this law we are able to analyze electric circuits
If you know any two values, you can analyze the third one
Lesson 10 - Kirchhoff's laws
Total resistance
If you have a circuit with 1 load the total resistance of the circuit will be different than if you have 2 or more of those loads connected in series or parallel
The current flowing through a circuit with multiple loads will be less than the current flowing through a circuit with 1 load
Adding more loads to a circuit increases the total resistance of the circuit
This affects the intensity of light bulbs in the circuit
As more bulbs are added, the dimmer the light bulbs will glow because there is less current going to each bulb
However, all the bulbs in each arrangement will glow the same
Kirchhoff’s laws
These laws explain the relationship between current, voltage, and resistance, as they apply to series and parallel circuits
Current law
All current that enters a loop, exit that loop
Voltage law
The sum of the voltage within a loop equals the voltage at the source
Series circuit
No matter how many loads are connected in series, there is only one path that the current can follow
If one light bulb goes out, the remaining light bulbs go out
Series circuit - current
Current is the same between any 2 points measured total = I1 = I2 = I3, where I is the current measured in amps.
Series circuit - voltage
The voltage at the course will equal the sum of the voltages across all loads
Vtotal = V1 + V2 + V3 , where V is the voltage measured in volts.
Math formulas
It is easier to simplify these formulas when using then in tactical applications
You will have to rearrange the formulas as needed for each circuit problem
Example for series circuit - math
Parallel circuit
When you connect loads in parallel, there are multiple paths the current can follow
If one light bulb goes out, the remaining light bulbs stay lit
Parallel circuit - current
The current is the sum of all current at each junction
Itotal = I1 + I2 + I3, where "I" is the current measured in amps.
Parallel circuit - voltage
The voltage at the course will be the same across all loads
Vtotal = V1 = V2 = V3 , where V is the voltage measured in volts.
Math formulas
Is it easier to simplify these formulas when using them in practical applications?
You will have to rearrange the formulas as needed for each circuit problem
Lesson 11 - Current and voltage analogies
Electric current
Is the rate of flow of electrons in a circuit
Current can be compared to the flow of water in a river
Series circuit
The rate of flow is the same anywhere throughout the circuit
Parallel circuit
The rate of flow along every parallel path adds up to the rate of flow at the battery
Voltage
Is the potential to do work
Can be compared to the amount of money you have to spend
Series circuit
The volts are shared throughout the whole circuit. For example, if a battery produces 20 Volts, every light on the circuit must share that potential energy. Similarly, if you have $20, you have to spend a little of it at every store you visit (and return home with no extra money). This means all lights will be relatively dull because they are all sharing the volts
Parallel circuit
Each pathway gets the same amount of voltage because the electrons can only take one path. Similarly, if you have $20 each pathway gets $20 and it does not need to be shared. This means all lights will be very bright
Lesson 12 - Energy at home
Electrical power
Is the rate at which electrical energy is produced or consumed in a given time
Unit of measurement for electrical power is the watt (W)
One watt is the equivalent of one joule per second (J/s)
Higher the power rating value, or wattage the more electrical energy a device produces (or uses to operate)
Light bulbs and power
Consider a 60 W incandescent light bulb and a 15 W compact fluorescent bulb (CFL)
The incandescent bulb uses more electrical energy than the CFL bulb to produce light
Each produced about the same amount of light
In the incandescent bulb has extra energy
It turns it into thermal energy instead of light
Measuring electrical energy
Joule is a relatively small unit of electrical energy so we often measure larger amounts of electrical energy
Kilowatt-hour is the SI unit used to measure energy usage
It is the use of one kilowatt of power for 1 hour
Electrical meters keep track of how much electrical energy is used in home, schools, and businesses in units of kWh
Transfer of energy
Total energy that goes into a device is always equal to the energy that goes out
Energy going into an electrical device is called energy input
Energy going out of the electrical device can be both useful energy and wasted energy
Energy efficiency
Useful energy is the energy we want the device to produce
In a light bulb, this would be light energy
Wasted energy is energy lost to its surroundings which are thermal
Efficiency refers to how well the electrical energy is changed into useful energy by a device
The energy efficiency of this incandescent light bulb is only 5%
Energuide and energy star
all households appliances are sold with an Energuide label which estimated how much electrical energy appliances use
Some appliances are labelled with the energy star symbol which indicated that a product meets or exceeds high-efficiency standards
Energy-efficient homes
Our houses need to be heated in the winter and cooled in the summer
We turn lights on and off
We use appliances
Electrical usage in the home costs money (sometimes a lot)
Newer homes are built more energy efficient
It Helps reduces electrical costs by reducing the amount of energy required to operate the home
Make a home energy efficient
Calculating efficiency
The higher the percentage, the more efficient the device is
Can calculate the efficiency of a device using equation
Percent efficiency = energy out/energy in x 100%