Physics - Electricity Lessons 1-12

Physics - Electricity Lessons 1-12


Lesson 1 - Static electricity

ElectrostaticsĀ 

  • Study of static electric chargeĀ 

  • All matter is made up of extremely tiny particles called atoms

  • Atoms are made up of three subatomic particlesĀ 

    • Protons with a positive charge

    • Neutrons with a neutral chargeĀ 

    • Electrons with a negative charge but also can be transferredĀ 

AtomĀ 

Neutral atomĀ 

  • 6 electrons shown

  • No electric chargeĀ 

  • Thus 6 protonsĀ 

May form an ionĀ 

  • Gain electrons which are negative

    • Anion

  • Lose electrons that are positiveĀ 

    • CationĀ 

Static electricityĀ 

  • A stationary electric chargeĀ 

  • Created when the atoms make up an object gain or lose electronsĀ 

    • Become ionsĀ 

Electric chargesĀ 

  • Positive chargeĀ 

    • Attracts negative and neutral objectsĀ 

  • Negative chargeĀ 

    • Attracts positive and neutral chargeĀ 

  • Neutral or unchargedĀ 

    • Attracts positive and negative objectsĀ 

Law of electric chargesĀ 

  • Like charges repel one anotherĀ 

  • Unlike charges attract one anotherĀ 

Creating an electrostatic charge (3 ways)

  • Friction

  • Direct contact

  • InductionĀ 

Transferring electrical chargesĀ 

FrictionĀ 

  • An object rubs against another transferring object chargeĀ 

  • Example- rubbing a balloon with a piece of silkĀ 


Tendency to be static

  • An electric charge that stays where the friction occurred on the charged objectĀ 

Direct contactĀ 

  • Object touches another transferring chargeĀ 

  • Example- a negatively charged person touching a neutral door knob

Charging by induction- temporaryĀ 

  • A charged object approaches a neutral objectĀ 

  • Causing the similar charge in the neutral object to move in an opposing directionĀ 

  • Thus causing a temporary chargeĀ 

  • For example - a negatively charged balloon approaches a neutral charged wall

The electrostatic seriesĀ 

  • List of objects or materials ranking their ability to lose electronsĀ 

    • The higher on the list the object is more likely to lose electronsĀ 

      • To become positively chargedĀ 

  • Friction between objects causes the transfer of electronsĀ 

ExampleĀ 

  • If you rub together a rubber balloon and your hair, how will electrons travelĀ 

  • Since hair is higher on the list it will lose electronsĀ 

    • Hair is positiveĀ 

    • Balloon is negativeĀ 

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


InsulatorĀ 

  • 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 electronsĀ 

ConductorĀ 

  • Electrons can move freely between atoms on the objectĀ 

  • When electrons are added they will flow through the object to the area of the greatest positive characterĀ 

  • Used as grounds

    • Ground wireĀ 

  • Allows electrons to enter or leave to neutralize objectĀ 

ConductorsĀ 

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

ChargingĀ 

  • Unequal number of positive and negative chargesĀ 

Charging by frictionĀ 

  • Transferring an electric charge from one substance to another by rubbing actionĀ 

  • Example- walking across carpet wearing socksĀ 

Review - Atomic structureĀ 

  • Protons say in the nucleusĀ 

    • They don’t move

  • Electrons are free to move

    • They can be transferred to different objectsĀ 

  • Example- coming hair with a plastic comb

    • Electrons were transferred while protons stayed in their original positionsĀ 

    • The comb had a stronger attraction for electrons than hair

Electrostatic seriesĀ 

  • Can be used to determine the kind of electric charge produces when two substances are rubbed together

Chart of electrostatic seriesĀ 

How does it work?

  • The top of the list has a weaker hold on electronsĀ 

    • The objects want to give away their electronsĀ 

  • Electrons are negatively chargedĀ 

    • If the object gives away negative it becomes positively charged

  • The bottom of the list has a stronger hold on electronsĀ 

  • Objects want to keep their electronsĀ 

    • They will attract any other electros from other objects with weaker abilitiesĀ 

  • Electrons are negatively charged if it adds more to it then it will stay as negatively chargedĀ 

  • For example - if silk and acetate are rubbed togetherĀ 

    • Silk has a stronger hold on electronsĀ 

    • Electrons are transferred from the acetate to the silk


Lesson 3 - Insulator and conductors

InsulatorsĀ 

  • Is a substance in which electrons cannot move freely from atom to atom

  • Gains electrons it becomes negatively chargedĀ 

  • The charge will continue to build-upĀ 

  • Used to protect us from electric shock

Examples of insulatorsĀ 

  • OilĀ 

  • Wood

  • Glass

  • Plastic

  • Rubber

ConductorĀ 

  • Is a substance in which electrons move freely from one atom to another

  • If the conductor is charged with extra electronsĀ 

    • They will move freely along the conductorĀ 

Examples of conductorsĀ 

  • Copper

  • AluminumĀ 

  • Gold

  • Platinum

  • Saltwater

  • Human body

A good insulator is a poor conductor

  • Example - wiresĀ 

  • Conductor = aluminum or copper wire

  • Insulator = rubber or plastic layer

Discharging objectsĀ 

  • Objects can become charged with excess electrons

  • When electrons are removed from the objectĀ 

    • They are discharged or neutralizedĀ 

  • Several ways of doing thisĀ 

    • Grounding - once connected to the earth, the earth can take all extra electronsĀ 

      • 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 electricityĀ 

Static electricityĀ 

  • Electrons build up in one placeĀ 

  • Move randomlyĀ 

  • Can travel short distances by dischargeĀ 

Current electricity

  • Electrons flow through a conductorĀ 

  • Move-in a controlled wayĀ 

  • Can travel long distancesĀ 

Electron flow in a conductorĀ 

  • For an electron to flow, a source of energy is neededĀ 

  • Example - batteryĀ 

    • When it is charged, electrons will flow

    • When it is dead, electrons don’t flow

Conductors and insulatorsĀ 

ConductorsĀ 

  • Materials that allow electrons to flow easilyĀ 

    • Examples-Ā 

    • Metals

    • Saltwater

    • People

    • Animals



InsulatorsĀ 

  • Materials that don’t let electrons flow easilyĀ 

  • Examples -

  • Rubber

  • Plastic

  • Fabric

  • Glass

  • Wool

  • Wood




Electric circuitsĀ 

  • Is a continuous path for electrons to flow

  • Example- electrically moving through a wire

Incomplete circuit/ open circuitĀ 

Complete circuit/ closed circuitĀ 








Components of a circuitElectricity - Lessons - Tes Teach

  • The simple circuit consists of…

  • Source

  • Connectors

  • Control devices

  • Loads





SourcesĀ 

  • The energy source is the beginning of the electric circuit pathwayĀ 

    • 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!

ConnectorsĀ 

  • Are conductors such as wires

  • Usually made of copper and aluminum

  • Join all parts of an electric circuit together

Control devicesĀ 

  • 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

LoadsĀ 

  • Is a device that transforms electrical energy into other usable forms of energyĀ 

  • Examples

  • Light bulb - light energy

  • Heater - heat energy

  • Speaker - sound energy

  • Fan - mechanical energy

Short circuitĀ 

  • Occurs when the electric current has found a shorter path to return the source without going through an appropriate loadĀ 

  • This causes the battery to become dangerously hot

  • Could cause the battery to burstĀ 

Sources of electrical energyĀ 

Comes from different sources

  • Electric cellsĀ 

  • Portable devices that convert chemical energy into electrical energyĀ 

  • Example - batteriesĀ 

  • Non-rechargeable is called primary cellsĀ 

    • When chemical reactions stop, the battery is deadĀ 

  • Rechargeable is called secondary cells

    • These batteries last much longer than primary cells

  • Fuel cellsĀ 

    • Special kind of electric cell that continually produces electricity along as a fuel source is providedĀ 

    • Example - hydrogenĀ 

Electric VS fuel cell vehiclesĀ 

  • Electric vehicles

    • Energy is stored in batteries to power one or more electric motorsĀ 

  • Fuel cell vehiclesĀ 

    • Hydrogen is stored in a fuel cell in the carĀ 

    • Reacts with oxygen from the air to create electricity


Lesson 5 - Series and parallel circuitsĀ 

Circuit diagramsĀ 

  • Is a way of drawing an electric circuit using standard symbolsĀ 

  • Negative and positive signs are used to identify the two terminals of an energy sourceĀ 





Cell vs battery

  • CellĀ 

    • 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 circuitsĀ 

  • Most circuits are used in everyday life have more than one loadĀ 

  • The loads may be connected in 2 ways

Series circuitsĀ 

  • 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 circuitĀ 

  • Examples - household wiring, stereo speakersĀ 

Series or parallelĀ 

  • A good example of examining circuit types is to remove 1 Christmas tree bulb from a string of lightsĀ 

  • If the entire string of lights goes off

    • Is a series circuitĀ 

  • If remaining lights stay on after one is removed

    • Parallel circuitĀ 

Simple circuit diagramsĀ 

  • The switch can go anywhere as long as it makes sense

  • The battery can go anywhere but keep it on the outside for parallel circuitsĀ 

  • Certain types of batteries are called dry cells

Lesson 6 - Electric currentĀ 


Electric currentĀ 

  • For any electrical device to operate

    • There must be a flow of electronsĀ 

  • When electrons flow through a conductorĀ 

    • It is said to constitute an electric currentĀ 

  • Electric current is the rate of electron flow in a circuitĀ 

  • The faster the electric charges travel through the conductorĀ 

    • The greater the current

  • Electric current is measured in amperes (amps)

Measuring currentĀ 

  • When an electrical circuit stops working

  • An electrician is calledĀ 

  • Electrician use an ammeter to measure the current flowing through different loads on a circuit

AmmeterĀ 

  • Must be connected in series with a load to measure the current flowing through the loadsĀ 

  • Ensures that all the electrons that flow through the load (ex. lamp) will also flow through it

Safety with electric currentĀ 

  • Very large currents can damage ;electrical devicesĀ 

    • Causing a electrical fire

  • This is why every home has a distribution panel with circuit breakersĀ 

    • Fuses in older homesĀ 

  • Too much current going through the circuit breaker causes it to tripĀ 

    • Behave like an open switch so that no current can flow through it


Lesson 7 - Potential differenceĀ 


Potential energyĀ 

  • Is the stored energy an object has because of its position or stateĀ 

ExamplesĀ 

  • Bicycle on top of a hill

  • Book held over your headĀ 

  • Stretched elastic bandĀ 

Kinetic energyĀ 

  • 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 energyĀ 

  • For centuries people have used the energy of falling water to push waterwheelsĀ 

  • Is possibleĀ 

    • 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 energyĀ 

Potential differenceĀ 

  • Similar to the flow of waterĀ 

  • Electric charges will flow from a point of higher potential to a point of lower potentialĀ 

  • This difference in electric potential between 2 points in a circuit is known as the potential difference

  • We often refer to potential difference as voltageĀ 

Electron flow in a batteryĀ 

  • In battery

    • Electrons flow from the negative electrode ( higher potential energy) to the positive electrode (lower potential energy)

Measuring potential differenceĀ 

  • When an electrician, technician, or engineer troubleshoots a circuit

    • The voltage, as well as the current at different parts of the circuit, must be measuredĀ 

    • A voltmeter is used to measure potential differenceĀ 

Voltmeter vs ammeterĀ 

  • The voltmeter must be connected in parallel with a load or an energy source

  • The ammeter must be connected in seriesĀ 

  • The reason for this is voltage is relative to two pointsĀ 

  • 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 - ResistanceĀ 


Resistance in circuitsĀ 

  • Is the opposite of electrical conductivityĀ 

  • Is the ability of a material to resist the flow of electrons as they move through a circuitĀ 

  • Uses the symbol R for resistance

  • Is measured in ohms (Ī©)

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 resistanceĀ 

  • All materials have some of this

  • Greater resistance lowers the currentĀ 

  • 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 energyĀ 

  • 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 resistanceĀ 

    • Example - copper wire, electrons flow freelyĀ 

Thickness of materialĀ 

  • Thicker the conducting wire, the more room for electrons to flow, less internal resistance

Length of materialĀ 

  • The longer the wire, the greater the internal resistance, the electrons have to travel through more material

Temperature of materialĀ 

  • Resistance increases as temperature increases

Resistance in circuitsĀ 

  • When electrons move through an electrical circuitĀ 

    • 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 dropĀ 

    • Voltage is lost or dropped across a conductorĀ 

Measuring resistance

  • Just as current and voltage are useful quantities to measure when troubleshooting a circuit, so is resistanceĀ 

  • Ohmmeter measure resistance

  • Ohmmeters are placed in parallel with a load

Resistors in circuitĀ 

  • The resistor is any electrical device that reduces the current in a circuit

  • ExamplesĀ 

    • Dimmer switches

    • 3-way lampsĀ 

    • Volume controls on stereosĀ 

    • Internet modemsĀ 

    • Cell phonesĀ Choose the symbol of variable resistance: toppr.com



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



VĀ is the voltage

IĀ is the current

RĀ 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 lawsĀ 

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 circuitĀ 

    • 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 circuitĀ 

  • 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 - currentĀ 

  • Current is the same between any 2 points measuredĀ totalĀ = I1Ā = I2Ā = I3,Ā where I is the current measured in amps.

Series circuit - voltageĀ 

  • The voltage at the course will equal the sum of the voltages across all loads

  • VtotalĀ = Ā V1Ā + V2Ā + V3 ,Ā where V is the voltage measured in volts.

Math formulasĀ 

  • 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 circuitĀ 

  • When you connect loads in parallel, there are multiple paths the current can followĀ 

  • 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 junctionĀ 

  • ItotalĀ = Ā I1Ā + I2Ā + I3,Ā where "I" is the current measured in amps.


Parallel circuit - voltageĀ 

  • The voltage at the course will be the same across all loads

  • VtotalĀ = Ā V1Ā = V2Ā = V3 ,Ā where V is the voltage measured in volts.

Math formulasĀ 

  • 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 analogiesĀ 

Electric currentĀ 

  • 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 circuitĀ 

    • The rate of flow along every parallel path adds up to the rate of flow at the battery

VoltageĀ 

  • Is the potential to do work

  • Can be compared to the amount of money you have to spendĀ 

  • Series circuit

    • The volts are shared throughout the whole circuit. Ā For example, if a battery produces 20 Volts, every light on the circuit must share that potential energy. Ā 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). Ā This means all lights will be relatively dull because they are all sharing the volts

  • Parallel circuitĀ 

    • Each pathway gets the same amount of voltage because the electrons can only take one path. Ā Similarly, if you have $20 each pathway gets $20 and it does not need to be shared. Ā This means all lights will be very bright

Lesson 12 - Energy at homeĀ 

Electrical powerĀ 

  • 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 powerĀ 

  • 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 lightĀ 

  • In the incandescent bulb has extra energyĀ 

    • It turns it into thermal energy instead of light


Measuring electrical energyĀ 

  • 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 usageĀ 

    • 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 kWhYour comprehensive guide to power quality





Transfer of energyĀ 

  • Total energy that goes into a device is always equal to the energy that goes outĀ 

  • Energy going into an electrical device is called energy inputĀ 

  • Energy going out of the electrical device can be both useful energy and wasted energy

Energy efficiencyĀ 

  • Useful energy is the energy we want the device to produceĀ 

  • In a light bulb, this would be light energy

  • Wasted energy is energy lost to its surroundings which are thermalĀ 

  • 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 starĀ 

  • all households appliances are sold with an Energuide label which estimated how much electrical energy appliances useĀ 

  • Some appliances are labelled with the energy star symbol which indicated that a product meets or exceeds high-efficiency standardsĀ 

Energy-efficient homesĀ 

  • Our houses need to be heated in the winter and cooled in the summerĀ 

  • We turn lights on and off

  • We use appliancesĀ 

  • 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 efficiencyĀ 

  • 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%Ā