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Current and Resistance
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Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Current and

Resistance

Page 2: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge

Electrons and protons have, in addition totheir mass, a quantity called charge

Charge (unlike mass) can be either positive(protons) or negative (electrons)

Like charges repel, unlike charges attract

Page 3: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Free ElectronsAn electron that is not bound to any particular atom

Page 4: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Ions External force can cause an electron to

leave its orbit -atom is referred to as a positive ion

External force can cause an atom to gain an electron -atom is referred to as a negative ion

Page 5: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Electric Current Whenever electric charges, an electric

current is said to exist The current is the rate at which the

charge flows through this surface Look at the charges flowing perpendicularly

to a surface of area A

The SI unit of current is Ampere (A) 1 A = 1 C/s

QI

t

Page 6: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Electrical Current

Insert Figure 1.10

Electron Flow Versus Conventional Current

Page 7: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Electric Current, cont The direction of the current is the

direction positive charge would flow This is known as conventional current

direction In a common conductor, such as copper, the

current is due to the motion of the negatively charged electrons

It is common to refer to a moving charge as a mobile charge carrier A charge carrier can be positive or negative

Page 8: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Current and Drift Speed If the conductor is isolated, the

electrons undergo random motion When an electric field is set up in

the conductor, it creates an electric force on the electrons and hence a current

Page 9: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Charge Carrier Motion in a Conductor

The zig-zag black line represents the motion of charge carrier in a conductor

The net drift speed is small

The sharp changes in direction are due to collisions

The net motion of electrons is opposite the direction of the electric field

Page 10: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Current and Drift Speed

Charged particles move through a conductor of cross-sectional area A

n is the number of charge carriers per unit volume

nAΔx is the total number of charge carriers

Page 11: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Current and Drift Speed The total charge is the number of

carriers times the charge per carrier, q ΔQ = (n A Δx) q

The drift speed, vd, is the speed at which the carriers move vd = Δx/ Δt

Rewritten: ΔQ = (n A vd Δt) q Finally, current, I = ΔQ/Δt = nqvdA

Page 12: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Quiz 1 Consider positive and negative charges moving

horizontally through the four regions in the following Figure. Rank the magnitudes of the currents in these four regions from lowest to highest.

(a) Id , Ia , Ic , Ib (b) Ia , Ic , Ib , Id (c) Ic , Ia , Id , Ib (d) Id , Ib , Ic , Ia (e) Ia , Ib , Ic , Id (f) none of these

Page 13: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Answer Quiz 1

(d). Negative charges moving in one direction are equivalent to positive charges moving in the opposite direction. Thus, Ia, Ib, Ic and Id

are equivalent to the movement of 5, 3, 4, and 2 charges respectively, giving Id < Ib < Ic< Ia

Page 14: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

A copper wire of cross-sectional area 3.00x10-6 m2 carries a current of 10 A. Assuming that each copper atom contributes one free electron to the metal, find the drift speed of the electron in this wire. The density of copper is 8.95 g/cm3.

22 3 19 6 2

6

10.0 /

8.48 10 1.6 10 3.00 10

2.46 10 /

d

I C sv

nqA electrons m C m

m s

Example

Page 15: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Electrons in a Circuit The drift speed is much smaller than the

average speed between collisions When a circuit is completed, the electric

field travels with a speed close to the speed of light

Although the drift speed is on the order of 10-4 m/s the effect of the electric field is felt on the order of 108 m/s

Page 16: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Quiz 2 Suppose a current-carrying wire has a cross-

sectional area that gradually becomes smaller along the wire, so that the wire has the shape of a very long cone. How does the drift speed vary along the wire?

(a) It slows down as the cross section becomes smaller.

(b) It speeds up as the cross section becomes smaller.

(c) It doesn’t change. (d) More information is needed.

Page 17: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Answer Quiz 2

(b). Under steady-state conditions, the current is the same in all parts of the wire. Thus, the drift velocity, given by vd = I/nqA, is inversely proportional to the cross-sectional area

Page 18: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Meters in a Circuit – Ammeter

An ammeter is used to measure current In line with the bulb, all the charge passing

through the bulb also must pass through the meter

Page 19: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Meters in a Circuit – Voltmeter

A voltmeter is used to measure voltage (potential difference) Connects to the two ends of the bulb

Page 20: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Voltage

The electrical potential difference is what causes current to flow.

The basic unit of voltage is the volts . ~

Page 21: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Current flow-Amperes (Amps)

Ampere: unit of measurement for electrical current.

One volt across aresistance of one ohm will produce a flow of one amp. ~

Page 22: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Exercise The capacity of a car battery is usually

specified in ampere-hours. A battery rated at, say, 100 A-h should be able to supply 100 A for 1 h, 50 A for 2 h, 25 A for 4 h, 1 A for 100 h, or any other combination yielding a product of 100 A-h. a. How many coulombs of charge should we be

able to draw from a fully charged 100 A-h battery?

b. How many electrons does your answer to part a require?

Page 23: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Answer

100 1 100 (1 ) 3600 360000C s

A hr hr Cs hr

322

19

360 10224.7 10

1.602 10

Assumptions:Battery fully charged.

a)

b) charge on electron: -1.602 ´ 10-19 Cno. of electrons =

Page 24: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Ohm’s Law German Physicist – George Simon Ohm

Found that current is inversely proportional to resistance for a given voltage

Known as Ohm’s law The Relationship Between Current and Voltage The Relationship Between Current and Resistance

Page 25: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Basic Circuit Calculations

Using Ohm’s Law to Calculate Current

where R = the circuit resistanceV = the applied voltage

R

VI

Page 26: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Basic Circuit Calculations Using Ohm’s Law to Calculate

Voltage

where I = the circuit currentR = the circuit resistance

IRV

Page 27: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Basic Circuit Calculations

Using Ohm’s Law to Calculate Resistance

whereV = the circuit voltage I = the circuit current

I

VR

Page 28: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Resistance Element

Page 29: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Ohm’s Law Experiments show that for many materials,

including most metals, the resistance remains constant over a wide range of applied voltages or currents

This statement has become known as Ohm’s Law ΔV = I R

Ohm’s Law is an empirical relationship that is valid only for certain materials Materials that obey Ohm’s Law are said to be

ohmic

Page 30: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Ohm’s LawOhm’s LawConductivity and resistivity

VL

AI

EA

IJ

1

A

LIV

IRV

AR

is resistivity

is current density

Page 31: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Example

A nichrome wire of radius 0.321 mm has resistivity of 1.5 x 10-6 Ωm. If a potential difference of 10.0 V is maintained across a 1 m length of the nichrome wire, what is the current?

Cross section: 22 3 7 20.321 10 3.24 10A r m m 6

7 2

1.5 104.6

3.24 10m

R m

l A m

Resistance/unit length:

10.02.2

4.6

V VI A

R

Page 32: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Ohm’s Law, cont

An ohmic device The resistance is

constant over a wide range of voltages

The relationship between current and voltage is linear

The slope is related to the resistance

Page 33: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Ohm’s Law, final Non-ohmic materials

are those whose resistance changes with voltage or current

The current-voltage relationship is nonlinear

A diode is a common example of a non-ohmic device

Page 34: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Ohmic devices vs. non-Ohmic

Page 35: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Quiz 4 In Figure, does

the resistance of the diode (a) increase or (b) decrease as the positive voltage ΔV increases?

Page 36: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Answer Quiz 4

(b). The slope of the line tangent to the curve at a point is the reciprocal of the resistance at that point. Note that as increases, the slope (and hence ) increases. Thus, the resistance decreases.

Page 37: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Temperature Dependence of Temperature Dependence of ResistanceResistance

Define temp coefficient of resistivityDefine temp coefficient of resistivity

dTd1

If If is small and constant is small and constant

oo TT1

Units of Units of is ( is (ooC)C)-1-1

Page 38: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Platinum Resistance ThermometerA resistance thermometer, which measures temperature by measuring the change in the resistance of a conductor, is made of platinum and has a resistance of 50 Ω at 20oC. When the device is immersed in a vessel containing melting indium, its resistance increases to 76.8 Ω. Find the melting point of Indium.

CR

RRTT o

o

oo 137

CT o157

Example

αα=3.92x10=3.92x10-3-3((ooC)C)-1-1

Since the To= 20oc then

Page 39: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Microscopic view of Ohm’s Law

2ne

mResistivity is a constant

Free electron Theory

Page 40: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Why do old light bulbs give less light than when new?

The filament of a light bulb, made of tungsten, is kept at high temperature when the light bulb is on.

It tends to evaporate, i.e. to become thinner, thus decreasing in radius, and cross sectional area.

Its resistance increases with time. The current going though the filament then decreases with time – and so does its luminosity.

Tungsten atoms evaporate off the filament and end up on the inner surface of the bulb.

Over time, the glass becomes less transparent and therefore less luminous.

Page 41: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Low temperature behavior of Low temperature behavior of resistanceresistance

SuperconductivitySuperconductivitySemiconductorSemiconductor

Page 42: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Exercise 1 If a current of 80.0 mA exists in a

metal wire, how many electrons flow past a given cross section of the wire in 10.0 min? Sketch the direction of the current and the direction of the electrons’ motion.

Page 43: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Exercise 2 If 3.25 × 10−3 kg of gold is

deposited on the negative electrode of an electrolytic cell in a period of 2.78 h, what is the current in the cell during that period? Assume that the gold ions carry one elementary unit of positive charge.

Page 44: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Exercise 3 An aluminum wire with a cross-

sectional area of 4.0 × 10−6 m2 carries a current of 5.0 A. Find the drift speed of the electrons in the wire. The density of aluminum is 2.7 g/cm3. (Assume that one electron is supplied by each atom.)

Page 45: Current and Resistance. The Starting Point: Elements, Atoms and Charge Electrons and protons have, in addition to their mass, a quantity called charge.

Exercise 4 If the current carried by a

conductor is doubled, what happens to (a) the charge carrier density? (b) the electron drift velocity?