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1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics [email protected] www.sci-ed-ga.org (click on Presentations to see all these slides)
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1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics [email protected] .

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Page 1: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

1

The Line of Resistance

APS Teachers Day WorkshopLos Angeles, CAMarch 22, 2005Dr. Larry WoolfGeneral Atomics

[email protected] (click on Presentations

to see all these slides)

Page 2: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

2

Multimeter Operation

• Work with your group

• With leads together, R = 0

• With leads not touching, R = open

Page 3: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Draw a line using the graphite pencil and measure its resistance

• Is the resistance measurement reproducible? Why or why not?

• How could you optimize the line shape and the measurement technique to make the measurement more reproducible?

Page 4: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Design an experiment to determine how the resistance

varies with length

• Discuss possible ways to do this with your group

Page 5: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Perform an experiment to determine how the resistance

varies with length

• Discuss your data with your group

• What model supports your data?

Page 6: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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How does resistance vary with length?

• Write an equation that reflects this variation

Page 7: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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R ~ L

Page 8: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Design an experiment to determine the total resistance of 2

resistors in series

• Discuss possible ways to do this with your group

Page 9: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Perform an experiment to determine the total resistance of

2 resistors in series

• Discuss your data with your group

• What model supports your data?

Page 10: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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What is the total resistance of 2 resistors in series?

• Write an equation that describes this relationship

Page 11: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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RT = R1 + R2

Page 12: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Predict the resistance - if you double the length of a resistorand - for 2 equal resistors in series

Page 13: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Single resistor R that doubles L: RT 2R

2 equal resistors R in series: RT 2R

Page 14: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Design an experiment to determine how the resistance

varies with width

Discuss possible ways to do this with your group

Page 15: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Perform an experiment to determine how the resistance

varies with width

• Discuss your data with your group

• What model supports your data?

Page 16: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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How does resistance vary with width?

• Write an equation that reflects this variation

Page 17: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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R ~ 1/Wor

1/R ~ W

Page 18: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Design an experiment to determine the total resistance of 2

resistors in parallel

• Discuss possible ways to do this with your group

Page 19: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Perform an experiment to determine the total resistance of

2 resistors in parallel

• Discuss your data with your group

• What model supports your data?

Page 20: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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What is the total resistance of 2 resistors in parallel?

• Write an equation that describes this relationship

• (Hint: Consider 1/R values of each resistor and of the resistors in parallel)

Page 21: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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1/R1 + 1/R2 = 1/RT

Page 22: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Predict the resistance - if you double the width of a resistorand - for 2 equal resistors in parallel

Page 23: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Single resistor R that doubles W: RT R/2

2 equal resistors R in parallel: RT R/2

Page 24: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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How does resistance vary with length and width?

• Write an equation that reflects this variation

Page 25: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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We found that R ~ L and R~ 1/Wso R ~ L/W

How does R vary with thickness?Why do you think so?

Page 26: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Generally:

R = L/(Wt) = L/A (A=Wt)

is called the electrical resistivity(t is thickness)

Page 27: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Resistivity and resistors-in-series relationshipR = L/A

If L = L1 + L2

R = (L1 + L2)/A = L1/A + L2/A = R1 + R2

Page 28: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Resistivity and resistors-in-parallel relationship R = L/A

If A = A1 + A2

R = L/ (A1 + A2) 1/R = (A1 + A2)/ L1/R = A1/ L + A2/ L 1/R = 1/R1 + 1/R2

Page 29: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Creative Dramas

Page 30: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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What is the difference between:

• Insulator

• Semiconductor

• Conductor

Page 31: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Creative drama for microscopic electron behavior for

insulator, semiconductor. and conductor

Page 32: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Conductor: ~1023 free electrons/cm3

Semiconductor: ~ 1012 – 1022 free electrons/cm3

Insulator: <1010 free electrons/cm3

Page 33: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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When a resistor’s width is doubled, what happens?

Page 34: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Creative drama for microscopic electron behavior for

width dependence of resistance

Page 35: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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When a resistor’s length is doubled, what happens?

Page 36: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Creative drama for microscopic electron behavior for

length dependence of resistance

Page 37: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Let’s look in more detail at the microscopic behavior of electrons in

a resistor

Page 38: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Electrical Resistance• Resistance to flow of electrons when a voltage is applied

– Apply a force (voltage)– Measure response to force (current)– Resistance is proportionality between force and response

• Flow is due to:– Number of electrons that move past a point (plane) per second– (River current flow analogy – water current flow depends on width and

depth of water, density of water, and the speed of the water: water flow is the number of water molecules that pass a point (plane perpendicular to motion) per second. In a similar manner, electron current flow depends on width and thickness of conductor, density of free electrons, and the speed of the electrons: electron flow is number of electric charges that pass a point (plane perpendicular to motion) per second.)

Page 39: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Known properties of circuits

V

I I

Resistor with resistance R

L

Measurements confirm constant I in the resistor.

Therefore charges in wire move with constant velocity.

But charges are subject to F=ma=qE=qV/L, so they should accelerate, not move with constant velocity!

Why?

Page 40: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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A model consistent with the data

Charges do not move freely from one end of the resistor to the other – they have lots of collisions, on average every time .

Vfinal ~ a

Therefore, charges move along the resistor with constant average “drift velocity - vD” that is proportional to the acceleration. (vD = a , not ½ a ; see references for details)

Page 41: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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HL

Electrical resistance

Voltage V and resistor length L

F = qE = q V/L = ma

a ~ V/L

Electrical/Mechanical Analogy

Mechanical ramp

Height H and ramp length L

Framp = mgsin = mgH/L = ma

a ~ H/L

V

L

Collision barriers

Page 42: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

42

Pegboard model of Ohm’s Law

Allows connection between:force and motion

andelectrical properties/Ohm’s Law

Page 43: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Pegboard Model of Electrical Resistance

• Balls – conduction electrons

• Pegs – scattering centers in a solid

• Height – voltage (V)

• Pegboard length – resistor length (L)

• Height/pegboard length – electric field (E=V/L)

• Ideally, fixed density of balls – fixed density of conduction electrons in solid; then current is number of balls that pass a line (perpendicular to electric field) per unit time; and R=V/I

Page 44: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Pegboard model of R=V/IChange: Effect:

L (at fixed V) E so a so vD so I so R

W (at fixed V) I so R

V E so a so vD so I

Density of balls(higher carrier density)

I so R (at fixed V)

Density of pegs(more defects)

or size of pegs (higher temperature – larger vibration amplitude of ions)

vD so I so R (at fixed V)

Page 45: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Pegboard with Pegs

Page 46: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

46

Close up of pegboard with pegs

Page 47: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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References for pegboard model

• Electricity and Magnetism, (Berkeley Physics Course volume 2), Edward M. Purcell, section 4.4: A Model for Electrical Conduction

• “A mechanical analogy for Ohm’s Law,” M. do Couto Tavares et al., Phys. Educ. volume 26, 1991, p. 195-199.– http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0031-9120/26/3/012

• “On an analogy for Ohm’s Law,” P. M. Castro de Oliveira, Phys. Educ. Volume 27, 1992, p. 60-61.– http://www.iop.org/EJ/abstract/0031-9120/27/2/001

• Feynman Lectures on Physics, volume 1, section 43, especially section 43-3.

• Pegs: Vermont American ¼ inch x 1 ¼ inch wood peg– Available at Home Depot in the tool section: $2 for pack of 36

• Pegboard: 2 feet wide x 4 feet long – Available at Home Depot in lumber section: $6

Page 48: 1 The Line of Resistance APS Teachers Day Workshop Los Angeles, CA March 22, 2005 Dr. Larry Woolf General Atomics Larry.Woolf@gat.com .

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Conclusion• Simple experiments to examine length and width

dependence of resistance and series and parallel combinations of resistors– Relationship between equation for resistivity and for series and

parallel combinations of resistors– Pictorial (graphite lines) and mathematical connection

• Microscopic behavior of electrons as the length and width of resistors are changed.– Creative dramas– Pegboard model: Connection between force and motion concepts

and Ohm’s Law• This workshop is based on The Line of Resistance,

available from the Institute of Chemical Education– http://ice.chem.wisc/edu/catalog.htm