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Current & Charge
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Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Dec 14, 2015

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Jaida Cullum
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Page 1: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Current & Charge

Page 2: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

New vocabulary .

• Nucleus • Electron (-)• Proton ( +)• Neutron (0)• Ion• Current• Semiconductor• Conductor • Insulator

Page 3: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Diagnostic test

Q1 : Draw the structure of an atom :

Q2 : Where do you use the electric energy ?

The electric energy change in to …………….. In the …………….

Q3 : How does the electric energy move from the power station ?

Flow through cables .

Q4 : Draw the direction of ( electron and conventional current ) in the circuit ?

Page 4: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

A semiconductor :is a material that has electrical conductivity between those of a conductor and an insulator; it can vary over that wide range either permanently or dynamically.

Semiconductors are essential in electronic technology. Semiconductor devices, electronic components made of semiconductor materials, are essential in modern consumer electronics, including computers, mobile phones, and digital audio players. Silicon is used to create most semiconductors commercially.

Page 5: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Semi-conductor devices consist of a diodes, transistors, SCR’s, triacs, and LED’s

Page 6: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Electric current Current is measured in amperes (A) using an ammeter .

1A=6X1018 electrons in each second .

The charge on 1 electron =1.6x10-19 C

Current ( I ) amps =

Charge ( Q ) coulomb / time ( t ) second

Page 7: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Measuring Current

If 1 Coulomb of charge (6.25 x 1018 electrons) passes a point each second, the current is 1 Ampere.

So, 1 Ampere = 1 Coulomb

Page 8: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q1 : current of 2A passes through a lamp for 3 minutes.A- how much charge passes through the lamp.B- how many electrons pass through the lamp.

Q2 : current of 15A passes through a radio for 4 minutes.A- how much charge passes through the radioB- how many electrons pass through the radio.

Q3 :If there is a current of 10 amperes in a circuit for 10 minutes, what quantity of electric charge flows in through the circuit?

Q4:. How much current must there be in a circuit if 100 coulombs flow past a point in the circuit in 4 seconds?

Q5 :. How much time is required for 10 coulombs of charge to flow past a point if the rate of flow (current) is 2 amperes?

Page 9: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Conduction in liquid and gases :

Page 10: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.
Page 11: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Electrons in a circuit do not move quickly - they actually “drift” at about 1 mm/s.It is the electric field that moves quickly - at about the speed of light - through the circuit and carries the energy.

Current and drift velocity

I = n A v e

I = currentN = number of electron A = part of a wire of cross-sectional V = drift velocityE = number of coulombs per second

Page 12: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q1 : copper contain 1x1029 free electron per m3. What is the drift velocity of electrons In a copper wire of cross – sectional area 0.55 mm2 carrying a current of 0.35A?

1m2= 1000mmx1000mm=1x106 mm2

1mm2= 1/1000m x 1/1000m=1x10-6 m2

Page 13: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Pop Quiz

Page 14: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q1• One example of :

• A- Semiconductor • B- Insulator• C- Conductor

Page 15: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q2:

• What is the name of this device :

Page 16: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q3 :• What is the unit of :• A- Current • B- Charge

Page 17: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q4 :

• A solution of sugar in pure water will not conduct . Why not ?

Page 18: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q5 :

• When can air be a conductor of electricity ?

Page 19: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Potential Difference

Page 20: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Charges can “lose” potential energy by moving from a location at high potential (voltage) to a location at low potential. Charges will continue to move as long as the potential difference (voltage) is maintained.

Page 21: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Potential difference or ( p.d.)Connecting a cell or battery in a complete circuit causes a potential difference across each component. Potential differences are measured in volts (V). The number of volts tells you the amount of energy given up as the current flows through a component. All of the energy put in by the cell is used up as the current flows through the component

p.d.(Volt) = W( joule ) /Q(coulomb )

p.d.=Potential differenceW = energy transferredQ = charge

Page 22: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Example

Q1 : Calculate the p.d. across a wire if the energy transferred is “A- 600 j when a charge of 50C passes through it .B- 450 j When there is steady current of 0.5 A for 20 second .

Q2 : A lamp has a p.d. of 12 v across it. Calculate how much electrical Energy is transferred when :A- a charge of 400 C passes through it .B- a current of 2.5A passes through it for 30 second .

Page 23: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

How do you measure p.d.?You use a voltmeter which is placed across the lamp as shown

W = I t p.d

Page 24: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Q1 : a 230v kettle transfers 6.9x105 j of energy in 5 minutes . What is the current In the kettle ?

Page 25: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Electrical Resistance

Most materials offer some resistance to the flow of electric charges through them. This is called electrical resistance.

Page 26: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Voltage Current Resistance

Definition

Symbol

Unit

Device

Complete the table

Page 27: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Resistance

Resistance of a conductor depends on:

Material - Gold is best

Length - longer conductors have more resistance.

Cross section - thick wires have less resistance than thin wires

Temperature - higher temperature means more resistance for most conductors

Page 28: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Ohms’ Law

In symbols:V = IR

                               VI R

                

Page 29: Current & Charge. New vocabulary. Nucleus Electron (-) Proton ( +) Neutron (0) Ion Current Semiconductor Conductor Insulator.

Complete the table Voltage

)volt (Current

)A(Resistance

)ohm (

110 50

30 2

44 20

15 60