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Unit 7, Chapter 19 CPO Science Foundations of Physics
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Unit 7, Chapter 19

Feb 06, 2016

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Unit 7, Chapter 19. CPO Science Foundations of Physics. Unit 7: Electricity and Magnetism. Chapter 19 Electricity. 19.1 Electric Circuits 19.2 Current and Voltage 19.3 Electrical Resistance and Ohm’s Law. Chapter 19 Objectives. Describe the difference between current and voltage. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Unit 7, Chapter 19

Unit 7, Chapter 19

CPO ScienceFoundations of Physics

Page 2: Unit 7, Chapter 19

Unit 7: Electricity and Magnetism

19.1 Electric Circuits

19.2 Current and Voltage

19.3 Electrical Resistance and Ohm’s Law

Chapter 19 Electricity

Page 3: Unit 7, Chapter 19

Chapter 19 Objectives1. Describe the difference between current and

voltage.

2. Describe the connection between voltage, current, energy, and power.

3. Describe the function of a battery in a circuit.

4. Calculate the current in a circuit using Ohm’s law.

5. Draw and interpret a circuit diagram with wires, battery, bulb, and switch.

6. Measure current, voltage, and resistance with a multimeter.

7. Give examples and applications of conductors, insulators, and semiconductors.

Page 4: Unit 7, Chapter 19

Chapter 19 Vocabulary Terms

electricity electric current voltage resistance Ohm’s law battery open circuit closed circuit short circuit

switch circuit diagram electrical

conductivity potentiometer wire volt electrical

symbols amperes (amps)

multimeter ohm resistor ammeter electrical

insulator semiconductor conductor electric circuit

Page 5: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.1 Electric Circuits

Key Question:

What is an electric circuit?

*Students read Section 19.1 AFTER Investigation 19.1

Page 6: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.1 Electric Circuits

Electricity refers to the presence of electric current in wires, motors, light bulbs, and other devices.

Electric current is similar to a current of water, but electric current flows in solid metal wires so it is not visible.

Electric current can carry a lot of power.

Page 7: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.1 Electric Circuits An electric circuit is something that provides a

complete path through which electricity travels. Wires in electric circuits are similar in some ways

to pipes and hoses that carry water.

Page 8: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.1 Electric Circuits When drawing a circuit diagram, symbols are

used to represent each part of the circuit. These electrical symbols are quicker and easier to

draw than realistic pictures of the components.

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Page 12: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Current and Voltage

Key Question:

How does current move through a circuit?

*Students read Section 19.2 AFTER Investigation 19.2

Page 13: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Current and voltage

Electric current is measured in units called amperes, or amps (A) for short.

One amp is a flow of a certain quantity of electricity in one second.

The amount of electric current entering a circuit always equals the amount exiting the circuit.

Page 14: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Current and voltage

Conventional current was proposed by Ben Franklin in the 1700’s.

Scientists later discovered that the particles that carry electricity in a wire actually travel from negative to positive.

Today, we still use Franklin’s definition.

Page 15: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Voltage

Voltage is a measure of electric potential energy, just like height is a measure of gravitational potential energy.

Voltage is measured in volts (V).

A voltage difference of 1 volt means 1 amp of current does 1 joule of work in 1 second.

Page 16: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Voltage

Since 1 joule per second is a watt (power), you can interpret voltage as measuring the available electrical power per amp of current that flows.

Page 17: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Voltage The positive end of a 1.5

volt battery is 1.5 volts higher than the negative end.

If you connect batteries positive-to-negative, each battery adds 1.5 volts to the total.

Three batteries make 4.5 volts.

Each unit of current coming out of the positive end of the three-battery stack has 4.5 joules of energy.

Page 18: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Measuring voltage of a cell

Set the meter to DC volts.

Touch the red (+) lead of the meter to the (+) battery terminal.

Touch the black (-) lead of the meter to the (-) battery terminal.

Adjust the meter dial as necessary.

Page 19: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Measuring voltage in a circuit

Measure the voltage across the battery exactly as before.

DO NOT DISCONNECT THE CIRCUIT.

NOTE: Since voltage is measured from one point to another, we usually assign the negative terminal of a battery to be zero volts (0 V).

Page 20: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Current and voltage

A battery uses chemical energy to create a voltage difference between its two terminals.

In a battery, chemical reactions provide the energy to pump the current from low voltage to high voltage.

A fully charged battery adds energy proportional to its voltage.

Page 21: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 What does a battery do? A battery uses chemical energy to move charges. If you connect a circuit with a battery the

charges flow out of the battery carrying energy.

Page 22: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 How do these batteries differ?

Some are smaller and don't store as much energy. Other batteries made with Ni and Cd can be recharged. Which battery above has the greatest voltage capacity?

Page 23: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Measuring Current

In practical electricity, we still label current flowing from plus to minus or HIGH voltage to LOW voltage.

Current can't be measured unless the charges flow through the meter.

Page 24: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.2 Current is a flow of charge

Page 25: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Electrical Resistance and Ohm’s Law

Key Question:

How are voltage, current, and resistance related?

*Students read Section 19.3 AFTER Investigation 19.3

Page 26: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Electrical resistance

Resistance measures how difficult it is for current to flow.

Page 27: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Electrical Resistance The total amount of electrical resistance in a

circuit determines the amount of current that in the circuit for a given voltage.

The more resistance the circuit has, the less current that flows.

Page 28: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Measuring resistance

Set the meter to measure resistance ().

Set the black and red leads on opposite ends of the objects.

Page 29: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 The ohm

Resistance is measured in ohms ().

One ohm is the resistance when a voltage of 1 volt is applied with a current of 1 amp.

Page 30: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Ohm's law

German physicist Georg Ohm experimented with circuits to find an exact mathematical relationship between voltage, current and resistance.

Ohm's law can be used to predict any one of the three variable if given the other two.

Page 31: Unit 7, Chapter 19
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19.3 Calculate current

A light bulb with a resistance of 2 ohms is connected in a circuit that has a single 1.5-volt battery.

Calculate the current that flows in the circuit. Assume the wires have zero resistance.

Page 33: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 The resistance of electrical devices

The resistance of electrical devices ranges from very small (0.001 Ω) to very large (10×106 Ω).

Each device is designed with a resistance that allows the right amount of current to flow when connected to the voltage the device was designed for.

Page 34: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Changing resistance

The resistance of many materials, including those in light bulbs, increases as temperature increases.

A graph of current versus voltage for a light bulb shows a curve.

A device with constant resistance would show a straight line on this graph.

Page 35: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Electrical Conductivity The electrical conductivity describes a

material’s ability to pass electric current.

Page 36: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Conductors and insulators A material such as copper

is called a conductor because it can conduct, or carry, electric current.

Materials that insulate against (or block) the flow of current are classified as electrical insulators.

Some materials are neither conductors nor insulators.

These materials are named semiconductors.

Page 37: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Resistors Electrical components

called resistors can be used to control current.

Resistors have striped color codes to record their "values" (writing on them is difficult).

Page 38: Unit 7, Chapter 19

19.3 Potentiometers Potentiometers are a type of "variable" resistor

that can change from low to high. They are wired so that as you turn the knob, it

changes the distance the current has to flow.

Page 39: Unit 7, Chapter 19

Application: Hybrid Gas/Electric Cars