Units of Electricity
Units of Electricity
Units of Electricity
Electrical Units
a.
b. c.
d.
e. f. g.
Current Quantity of Electricity Electric Potential Resistance Electromotive Force Ohms Law Electric Energy
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a) Current
current which, if maintained in two straight parallel conductors of infinite length, of negligible circular cross-section, and placed 1 meter apart in a vacuum, would produce between these conductors a force of 2 x 10-7 newton per meter of length. The conductors are attracted towards each other if the currents are in the same direction, whereas they repel each other if the currents are in opposite directions.
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Electric current
Electric current in a wire is defined as the net amount of charge that passes through the wire per unit time at any point. The average current is defined as:
I = Q t
1A = 1C 1s
Electric current is called the ampere. 1 Ampere (A) = 1 coulomb per second (C/s)
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Battery
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Example 1
A steady current of 2.5 A flows in a wire for 4.0 min.
How
much charge passed through any point in the circuit? Q = I t = (2.5 C/s)(240 s) = 600 C
How
many electrons would this be? 1 e = 1.60 X 10-19 C, so 600 C equals to 600 C = 3.8 X 1021 electrons 1.6X10-19 C/electron
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Example 2
b) Quantity of Electricity
The unit of electrical quantity is the coulomb, namely the quantity of electricity passing a given point in a circuit when a current of 1 ampere is maintained for 1 second. Q [coulombs] = I [amperes] X t [seconds] Symbol: Q Unit: coulomb (C)
c) Electric Potential
The electric potential at a point a or Va equals the potential energy (PEa) per unit charge at that point.
Va = PEa/q
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Potential Difference
The positive plate has a higher potential than the negative plate. Thus a positively charged object moves naturally (like charge repels) from a high potential to low potential. A negatively charged object does the opposite. Potential difference is often referred to as volt or voltage.
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d) Resistance
resistance between two points of a conductor when a potential difference of 1 volt, applied between these points, produces in this conductor a current of 1 ampere, the conductor not being a source of any electromotive force. OR, the resistance of a circuit in which a current of 1 ampere generates heat at the rate of 1 watt. Symbol: R Unit: ohm ()
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Resistor
Resistors are used to control the amount of current flow. In a circuit, resistors are indicated by the symbol
a b c d
Resistor Coding
Digit 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Color Black Brown Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Violet Tolerance 5% 10% 20% Color Gold Silver No color band
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9
Grey
White
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Resistivity
Resistance of a wire depends on some factors like as length (L), cross-sectional area (A) and resistivity of material (). R= L A
Resistivity of a material also depends on temperature. In general, the resistance of metals increases with temperature. T = 0 [ 1 + ( T T0 ) ]
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Example 3
Speaker wires. Suppose you want to connect your stereo to remote speakers. If each wire must be 20 m long, what diameter of copper wire should you use to keep the resistance less than 0.10 per wire? A = L/R = (1.68 X 108 .m)(20m) = (0.10 ) = 3.4 X 10-6m2 A = d2 /4 (Area calculation formula) d = (4A)/ = 2.1 X 10-3 m = 2.1 mm
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Exercise
1.
2. 3.
4. 5.
What is a simpler way of expressing 0.000 005 A? What is a simpler way of expressing 3 000 000 V? A potential difference of 6 V causes a current of 0.6 A to flow in a conductor. Calculate the resistance of the conductor. Find the potential difference to pass a current of 5 A through a conductor of resistance 8 . A 960 lamp is connected to a 240 V supply. Calculate the current in the lamp.
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e) Electromotive Force
An electromotive force is that which tends to produce an electric current in a circuit, and unit of e.m.f. is the volt. Symbol: E Unit: volt (V)
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f) Ohms Law
To produce an electric current, a difference in potential is required. The current in a metal wire is proportional to the potential difference V applied to its ends: I V The current flow through the wire is inversely proportional to the resistance of the wire for a given voltage. I = V / R or V = I R (Ohms Law) The unit for resistance is called the ohm ()
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Example 4
Flashlight bulb resistance. A small flashlight bulb draws 300 mA from its 1.5V battery.
What
If
the voltage dropped to 1.2V, how much would the current change? I = V / R = 1.2 V / 5.0 = 0.24 A
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Closed circuit complete circuit Open circuit disconnected wiring or incomplete circuit Short Circuit when two wires crossed
No current flow current
Closed Circuit
Open Circuit
Short Circuit
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g) Electric Energy
Electric energy can be transformed into other forms of energy like thermal energy, light. Electric energy => Thermal energy => light Example of applications are toasters (thermal), light bulb (thermal and light)
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Equations of Power
The Power equation can be rewritten as P = IV (a) = I (IR) = I2R (b) = (V/R)V = V2/R (c) Equation (a) applies to any device while equation (b) & (c) only applied to resistors.
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Example 5
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Kilowatt-hour (kWh)
It is energy and not power that you pay for your electric bill. Usually energy in homes is specified as kilowatt-hour (kWh) which is equivalent to 1 kWh = (1000W)(3600s) = 3.60 X 106 J
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Example 6
An
electric heater draws 15A on a 120V line. How much power does it use and how much does it cost per month (30 days) if it operates 3.0 h per day and the electric company charges 10.5 cents per kWh?
Power (P) = IV = (15A)(120V) = 1800W = 1.8kW Operation per month is = 3hr/day multiply by 30day = 90hr The monthly power consumption per month for the electric heater is (1.8kW) X (90h) = 162kWh So the cost would be 162kWh X RM0.105/kWh = RM 17
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Current is the rate of flow of electric charge in a circuit. The terms is often used to describe the flow of electric charge, e.g. a current is flowing in a circuit; this is ambiguous but is so common that we have to accept it.
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Contd
Electric charge may be either +ve or ve. ve electrons are free to move around a circuit thus transporting energy from source to load. To maintain a current, the source must provide a driving force called the electromotive force (e.m.f.).
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Contd
The potential difference across a load indicates in volts the energy lost per coulomb of charge passing through the load. Since the current is the rate flow, its product with the voltage gives the rate of energy transmission, i.e. the power.
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Contd
Resistance is a measure of the opposition to the flow of charge through a load. Ohms Law states that the ratio of voltage to current is constant, provided other physical factors such as temperature remain unchanged.
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