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Lesson 18 Electric Current Eleanor Roosevelt High School Chin-Sung Lin

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Page 1: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Lesson 18

Electric CurrentEleanor Roosevelt High School

Chin-Sung Lin

Page 2: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Flow of Charge and

Electric Circuits

Page 3: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Water Flow ModelHigh Potential Energy Water

Low Potential Energy Water

Pump Doing Work

Height

Water Doing Work

Water Pipe

Page 4: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Water Flow vs. Electric Current

High Potential Energy Water

Low Potential Energy Water

Pump Doing Work

Height

Water Doing Work

Water Pipe

Page 5: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Model

Battery Doing Work

Voltage

Electric Current Doing Work

High Voltage

Electric Circuits

Low Voltage

Page 6: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Water / Electric Current Model

Page 7: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Model

Battery Doing Work

Voltage

Electric Current Doing Work

High Voltage

Electric Circuits

Low Voltage

Page 8: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Model

Battery Doing Work

Electric Current Doing Work

High Voltage

Electric Circuits

Low Voltage

Voltage

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Light Bulb Structure

Page 10: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Circuit Symbols

Battery Resistor

Wire

Voltage

Page 11: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Circuits

Battery

Resistor

Wire

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Electric Circuits

Page 13: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law

Page 14: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current

Voltage (V)

Current (I)

Resistance (R)

Page 15: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current

V (volts, V)

I (amperes , A)

R (ohms, Ω)

Page 16: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law

V

I

R

Page 17: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law

V: Voltage (V) I : Current (A) R: Resistance (Ω)

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Voltmeter – Measuring Voltage

V

V

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Ammeter – Measuring Current

A

A

Page 20: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Multimeter – Measuring All

V: Voltage (V) I : Current (A) R: Resistance (Ω)

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Digital Multimeter – Measuring All

V: Voltage (V) I : Current (A) R: Resistance (Ω)

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Digital Multimeter – Measuring All

Page 23: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Digital Multimeter – Measuring All

CurrentVoltage /Resistan

ceGroun

d

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Digital Multimeter – Measuring All

Page 25: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Digital Multimeter – Measuring All

Resistance

DC Voltage

AC Voltage

AC Current

DC Current

Transistor

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Ohm’s Law

V (V)

I (A)

R (Ω)

A

V

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Ohm’s Law

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Ohm’s Law

voltage = constant x current V = R x I V: Voltage (V)

I : Current (A)

R: Constant or Resistance (Ω)

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Ohm’s Law

R = or V = I R or

I = VR

VI

V: Voltage (V) I : Current (A) R: Resistance (Ω)

Page 30: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law Example

What is the current through a 4-ohm resistor connected to a 12-V power supply?

Page 31: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law Example

What is the current through a 4-ohm resistor connected to a 12-V power supply?

I = V / R

I = 12 V / 4 Ω = 3 A

Page 32: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law Example

A 5-ohm resistor has a 8-A current in it. What is the voltage across the resistor?

Page 33: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law Example

A 5-ohm resistor has a 8-A current in it. What is the voltage across the resistor?

V = I R

V = 8 A x 5 Ω = 40 V

Page 34: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law Example

What is the resistance of a device that uses 2.5 A of current when connected to a 15-volt power source?

Page 35: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Ohm’s Law Example

What is the resistance of a device that uses 2.5 A of current when connected to a 15-volt power source?

R = V / I

R = 15 V / 2.5 A = 6 Ω

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Ohm’s Law Exercises

What is the current through a 6-KΩ resistor connected to a 9-V power supply?

What is the resistance of a device that uses 0.5 mA of current when connected to a 5-volt power source?

A 2.5-MΩ resistor has a 0.02-mA current in it. What is the voltage across the resistor?

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Resistors

Page 38: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Resistors

A resistor is a two-terminal electronic component which implements electrical resistance

Resistors are used to control the amount of current flowing in a circuit

Resistor are usually measured by the units of Ω, kΩ, and MΩ

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Resistors

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Resistors on PCB

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Resistor Color Coding

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Surface Mount Resistors

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SMT Resistors on PCB

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Resistance and

Resistivity

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Resistance

Electric current in a circuit is decided by voltage (V) and resistance (R): I = V / R

What are the factors to determine the resistance?

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Resistance & Length

Which one has larger resistance?

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Resistance & Length

Which one has larger resistance?

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Resistance & Length

Which one has larger resistance?

R ~ L

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Resistance & Area

Which one has larger resistance?

Page 50: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Resistance & Area

Which one has larger resistance?

Page 51: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Resistance & Area

Which one has larger resistance?

R ~

1A

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Resistance & Resistivity

Which one has larger resistance?

SilverCoppe

r

Page 53: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Resistance & Resistivity

Which one has larger resistance?

SilverCoppe

r

Page 54: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Resistance & Resistivity

Resistivity

of Materials

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Resistance & Resistivity

Which one has larger resistance?

R ~ ρ

SilverCoppe

r

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Resistance

Resistance is determined by

ρ resistivity [Ω m]

L length [m]A cross-section area [m2]

R =

ρ LA

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Resistance Example

A 0.5-m long Nichrome wire has 0.001 m2 cross-section. What is the resistance of the wire?

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Resistance Example

A 0.5-m long Nichrome wire has 0.001 m2 cross-section. What is the resistance of the wire?

R = ρ L / A

= (150 x 10 -8 Ωm) (0.5 m) / 0.001 m2

= 7.5 x 10-4 Ω

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Resistance Exercise

A 1.2 x 10-5 Ω Copper wire has 0.004 m2 cross-section. What is the length of the wire?

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Resistance Exercise

A 1.2 x 10-5 Ω Copper wire has 0.004 m2 cross-section. What is the length of the wire?

R = ρ L / A

1.2 x 10-5 Ω = (1.72 x 10 -8 Ωm) L / 0.004 m2

L = 2.79 m

Page 61: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current

Page 62: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current

Electric current is the flow of charge

In solid conductors: the electrons

In fluids: positive and negative ions as well as electrons

Electric current is usually measured in units of A and mA

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Electric Current

When electrons flow in a wire, the number entering one end is the same as the number leaving the other

The net charge of the wire is normally zero

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Electric CurrentElectric (conventional) current is

from positive to negative, while electron flow is from negative to positive

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Electric Current

Current is the charge flow rate past a given cross-section

(current) = (charge) / (time) or I = Q / t

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Electric Current

1 A is 1 C of charge going past a given cross-section per second

1 C is 6.24 x 1018 electrons

Page 67: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Example

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

Page 68: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Example

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

I = Q / t

= 100 C / 4 s

= 25 A

Page 69: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Exercise

If there is a current of 20 amperes in a circuit for 10 minutes, what quantity of electric charge flows in through the circuit?

Page 70: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Exercise

If there is a current of 20 amperes in a circuit for 10 minutes, what quantity of electric charge flows in through the circuit?

Q = I t

= 20 A x 600 s

= 12000 C

Page 71: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Exercise

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 72: Flow of Charge and Electric Circuits Water Flow Model High Potential Energy Water Low Potential Energy Water Pump Doing Work Height Water Doing Work

Electric Current Exercise

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

t = Q / I

= 10 C / 2 A

= 5 s

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Voltage Sources

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Voltage Source

A voltage source is a two-terminal circuit element which supplies a constant DC or AC potential difference for any current flow through it

Voltage sources: dry cell batteries, wet cell batteries, solar panel, or generators

Voltages are usually measured by the units of V, kV, and MV

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Voltage Source

The potential energy per coulomb of charge available to electrons moving between terminals is the voltage

V = W / q

Voltage is sometimes called the electromotive force, or emf

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Voltage Sources: Dry Cell

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Voltage Sources: Wet Cell

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Voltage Sources: Solar Panel

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Voltage Sources: Generator

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Batteries in Parallel / Series

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Batteries in Parallel / Series

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Batteries in Parallel / Series Exercise

1 KΩ

1 KΩ1 KΩ

Calculate the current in each case

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Electric Shock

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Electric Shock

The damaging effects are the result of current passing through the body

The current depends on the voltage applied and also on the resistance of the human body (I = V / R)

The resistance of the body range from ~100 Ω to ~500 KΩ

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Electric Shock

Current (A) Effect

0.001 can be felt

0.005 painful

0.010 involuntary muscle contractions (spasms)

0.015 loss of muscle control

0.070if through the heart, serious disruption; probably fatal if current lasts for more than 1 second

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Electric Shock

Why do the birds perch on the high-voltage wires not getting electric shock?

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Electric Shock

Why do the birds perch on the high-voltage wires not getting electric shock?

Because every part of their bodies is at the same high potential as the wire

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DC & AC

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Direct Current (DC)

A flow of charge that flows in one direction, even if the current moves in unsteady pulses

A battery produces direct current

Electrons always move through the circuit in the same direction from the negative terminal and toward the positive terminal

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Direct Current (DC)

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Direct Current (DC) Waveform

Time

Voltage

Time

Voltage

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Alternating Current (AC)

A flow of charge is alternating its directions

This is accomplished by alternating the polarity of voltage at voltage source

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Alternating Current (AC)

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Alternating Current (AC) Waveform

Time

Voltage

Time

Voltage

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Alternating Current (AC)

Nearly all of the commercial AC circuits in North America involves 120 V and 60 Hz

Europe adopted 220 V as their standard

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Alternating Current (AC)

The 120 V refers to the “root-mean-square” (RMS) average of the voltage The actual voltage in a 120 V AC circuit varies between +170 V and – 170 V peaks. It delivers the same power as a 120 V DC circuit

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Alternating Current (AC)

Because most electric service in the United States is three-wire: one wire at +120 V, one wire at 0 V (neutral), and the other wire at -120 V

Most of the appliance use +120V/-120 V and the neutral wires, producing 120 V. When use both +120V and -120 V wires, a 240 V is produced

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AC-to-DC Conversion

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Speed of Electrons

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Thermal Speed vs. Drift Speed

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Thermal Speed vs. Drift Speed

Thermal motion (random motion) speed inside a metal wire is about 1/200 the speed of light

Under electric field, the Drift Speed (net speed) is only about 0.01 cm/s

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Speed of Electrons

The electrons will collide with the metallic ions in their path and transfer some kinetic energy to them

The extremely high speed of electricity is not due to the electrons but due to the signal. The signal is traveling at near high speed

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Speed of Electrons

The electrons inside the conductor will shift forward (DC) or forward and backward (AC)

Why does the electric power company charge you money when they provide you AC electricity which no net electrons enter your home?

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Speed of Electrons

The AC outlets in your home do not supply you electrons but supply you energy

The source of the electrons is the conducting circuit material itself

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Electric Power

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Electric PowerThe rate at which electrical energy

is converted into another form (mechanical energy, heat, or light) is called electric power

(Electric Power) = (Electric Energy) / (Time)

Unit: Watts (W)P =

W

t

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Electric PowerElectric Power = Energy / Time

= (Charge/Time) x (Energy/Charge)

= Current x Voltage

Unit: 1 watt = (1 ampere) x (1 volt)

P = I V

P =

= V I = I V

Wt

= Wq

q

t

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Electric Power

Derive the formulas of 1. P, I, R,

2. P, V, R

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Electric Power

P = I V = I (I R) = I 2 R P = I V = ( ) V =

VR

V 2

R

P = I V = I

2 R =

V 2

R

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Electric Power

Since Energy / Time = Power, Energy = Power x Time

Derive the formulas of 1. W, I, V, and t

2. W, I, R, and t

3. W, V, R and t

W = P t

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Electric Power

Since Energy/Time = Power, so Energy = Power x Time

W = P t = I V t = I 2 R t W = P t = I V t = ( ) t = t

V 2

R V 2

R

W = Pt = IVt = I2Rt = t

V 2

R

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Electric Power

Energy can be represented in units of kilowatt-hours (kW·h)

1 kW·h = 3.6 x 106 J

A kilowatt is 1000 watt, and a kilowatt-hour is the energy consumed in 1 hour at the rate of 1 kilowatt

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Electric Power Example

A light bulb is plugged into a 120-volt outlet and has a 0.7 A current in it. What is the power rating of the light bulb?

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Electric Power Example

A light bulb is plugged into a 120-volt outlet and has a 0.7 A current in it. What is the power rating of the light bulb?

P = I V

= (0.7 A)(120 V)

= 84 W

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Electric Power Example

A heater uses 21 A when connected to a 110-V line. If electric power costs 10 cents per kilowatt-hour in this location, what is the cost of running the heater for 13 hours?

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Electric Power Example

A heater uses 21 A when connected to a 110-V line. If electric power costs 10 cents per kilowatt-hour in this location, what is the cost of running the heater for 13 hours?W = I V t

= (21 A)(110 V)(13 hr)

= 30030 W-hr

= 30.03 kW-hr

Cost = ($ 0.1 /kW-hr)(30.03 kW-hr) = $3.00

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Electric Power Exercise

A 120 V outlet in Tony’s house is wired with a circuit breaker on an 8 A line. a) If Tony tries use his newly-bought 1200-Watt hair dryer, will he trip the circuit breaker? b) What is the resistance of the hair dryer?

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Electric Power Exercise

Alice likes to keep her 40-Watt front porch light on at night time from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m., and Alice pays 8.00¢ per kWh, how much does it cost to run the light for this amount of time each week?

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The End