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Electricity
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Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

Jan 18, 2018

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Simple Circuit
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Page 1: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

Electricity

Page 2: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

• Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water)

• Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second• Current (I) = charge (q) / time (t)• I = q/t• Unit is coulomb per second, called ampere, or amp for

short

Electric current

Page 3: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

Simple Circuit

Page 4: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

• Substance that allows charges to flow easily• Metals- good conductors• Wood/plastic/rubber/diamond/glass- poor conductors

• Good conductors have low resistance and vice versa

Conductors

Page 5: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

• Electrical resistance is property of opposing or reducing current

• Depends on four variables:• Material• Length (longer has greater

resistance)• Diameter (thinner has greater

resistance)• Temperature (increased temp

greater resistance)

Resistance

Page 6: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

• An electrical circuit contains a device, such as a battery or generator, that acts as a source of energy as it forces charge out of one terminal, through the wires of the circuit, and back into the other terminal.

• Work is done by electric field generator (ie. battery)• Work done by device (ie. Lamp) is equal to work done on

battery• Voltage (V) is ratio of work to charge moved• V=W/q• 1 volt (V) = 1 joule (J) / 1 coulomb (C)

Voltage

Page 7: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

Electric Circuits

Page 8: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

Volt = joule/coulomb• 1 V = 1 J/1 C• Household circuits typically have 120 or 240 volts• V of 120 means that each coulomb of charge that moves

through the circuit can do 120 J of work in some electrical device

• Is there anything that might limit work?• resistance

Units of electric circuit

Page 9: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

• If conductor offers small resistance, less voltage needed to push an amp of current through circuit

• More resistance requires more voltage• Resistance is ratio between voltage and resulting current • R=V/I………………….1 ohm = 1 volt/1 amp• Resistance units are ohms ()• Rearrange equation to get• V=IR, this is known as Ohm’s law

Resistance

Page 10: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

Ohm’s Law

• Voltage (V)• Resistance (R)• Current (I)

Page 11: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

• All circuits have three parts in common• Voltage source, device where work is done, conducting

wires• Resistance impacts work done (like friction), so we use

low resistance conducting wires• Power output is determined by voltage, current, time• Power =Voltage * Current• P = joule/coulomb times coulomb/sec yielding joule/sec• A joule/sec is called a watt

Electrical power and work

Page 12: Electricity. Means a flow of charge (like a water current indicates flow of water) Electric current is based on quantity of charge per second Current.

• Voltage usually 120 or 240• Lightbulb might have power of 100 W

• Cost varies, usually in cents per kilowatt-hour• Cost = (watts)(time)(rate)

1,000 watt/kW

Electrical power and cost