nature & background of electricity

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Page 1: Nature & Background of Electricity
Page 2: Nature & Background of Electricity

What is Electricity?

• It is a form of energy,evident from the factthat it runs machineryand can be transformedinto other types ofenergy such as light andheat.

• It is invisible. During anelectrical storm, we donot see electricity. Weobserve the air beingionized when the

Page 3: Nature & Background of Electricity

Where do charges come from?

Matter is made up of atoms.

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Proton (positive charge)

neutron (neutral)

electron (negative charge)

atom nucleus

Page 4: Nature & Background of Electricity

Who Discovered Electricity?

The Greeks had some idea of electricity.

In the 18th century Franklin and otherEuropeans knew a great deal about it. Earlyin the century, Alessandro Volta inventedthe first source of continuous electriccurrent - the battery. Later, HansChristian Oersted discovered that anelectric current produced magnetism.

But it was Michael Faraday whodescribed the nature of the phenomena. Inhis electromagnetic induction theory hestated that an electric current flows in aconductor if that conductor is in a movingmagnetic field and is part of a circuit.

Page 5: Nature & Background of Electricity

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The world is filled with electrical charges:

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Page 6: Nature & Background of Electricity

Electrons…

Are located on the outer edges of atoms… They can be moved.A concentration of electrons in an

atom creates a net negative charge.If electrons are stripped away, the

atom becomes positively charged.

Page 7: Nature & Background of Electricity

Charges interact with each other:

Page 9: Nature & Background of Electricity

Coulomb’s law• The magnitude of the force between

2 equal sized objects

• Fe = K q1 q2

r2

K (electrostatic constant =9 x 109 N m2/C2)

q (charge in Coulombs)

r ( distance between the charges)

r

Fe

Page 10: Nature & Background of Electricity

Coulomb’s Law Examples• A positive charge of 6.0 x 10 -6C is 0.030m from a second

positive charge of 3.0 x 10 -6C. Calculate the force between the charges.

Fe

= K q1

q2

r2

= (8.99 x 109

N m2/C

2) (6.0 x 10

-6C) (3.0 x 10

-6C)

( 0.030m )2

= (8.99 x 109

N m2/C

2) (18.0 x 10

-12C)

(9.0 x 10 -4

m2)

= + 1.8 x 10 -8

N

Page 11: Nature & Background of Electricity

The interaction between static electric charges

van de Graaff

generator

Page 12: Nature & Background of Electricity

What is Static Electricity?

Static electricity is electricity at rest. It isproduced by friction, by rubbing. All matter containspositively charged particles called protons andnegatively charged particles called electrons. In anuncharged atom, the protons and electrons balanceeach other and the atom is neutral. If this neutralatom loses an electron, because it has an excess ofprotons, it is said to be positively charged. If theneutral atom gains an electron, it is said to benegatively charged.

Rubbing can tear electrons loose from certainatoms. Some substances, because of the character oftheir atoms, tend to lose electrons and becomepositively charged; other substances gain electronseasily and become negatively charged.

Page 13: Nature & Background of Electricity

Static Discharge• Occurs when there is a loss of

static electricity due to three possible things:

•Friction - rubbing

•Conduction – direct contact

•Induction – through an electrical field (not direct contact)

Page 14: Nature & Background of Electricity

Electricity that moves…

• Current - The flow of electrons from one place to another.

• Measured in Amperes (Amps)

• Kinetic energy

Page 15: Nature & Background of Electricity

Conductors vs. Insulators

Conductors – material through which electric current flows easily.

Insulators – materials through which electric current cannot move.

Page 16: Nature & Background of Electricity

ExamplesConductors

CopperMercurySilverAluminumHuman BodyMetallic SaltsCharcoal

Insulators

WoodRubberGlassPorcelain

Page 17: Nature & Background of Electricity
Page 18: Nature & Background of Electricity

• The opposition to the flow of an electric current, producing heat.

• The greater the resistance, the less current gets through.

• Good conductors have lowresistance.

Page 19: Nature & Background of Electricity

What Influences Resistance?

1. Material of wire –aluminum and copper have low resistance

2. Thickness – the thicker the wire the lower the resistance

3. Length – shorter wire has lower resistance

4. Temperature – lower temperature has lower

Page 20: Nature & Background of Electricity

The unit for measuring resistance is the Ohm (Ω).

Page 21: Nature & Background of Electricity

• The measure of energy given to the charge flowing in a circuit.

• The greater the voltage, the greater the force or “pressure”that drives the charge through the circuit.

Page 22: Nature & Background of Electricity

Current is directly proportional to voltage and inversely proportional

to resistance.

Page 23: Nature & Background of Electricity

Ohm’s Law Example 1

I = 1.5 AmpsI =

3 V

2 Ω

Page 24: Nature & Background of Electricity

Example 2:A light bulb operates on a 110 volt circuit.

The bulb draws a current of .91 amps. What is the resistance of the light bulb?

V=IRR=V/IR=110V/.91A120.8 Ohms, Ω

Page 25: Nature & Background of Electricity
Page 26: Nature & Background of Electricity