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Current�and�Resistance. Electric Current Resistance and Ohm’s Law A Model for Electrical Conduction Resistance and Temperature Superconductor Electrical Energy and Power. Electric Current. Suppose that the charges are moving perpendicular to a surface of area A
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Current�and�Resistance Electric Current Resistance and Ohm’s Law A Model for Electrical Conduction Resistance and Temperature Superconductor Electrical Energy and Power
Electric Current • Suppose that the charges are moving perpendicular to a surface of area A • The current is the rate at which charge flows through this surface • The average current • The Instantaneous current is • The SI unit of current is the ampere (A):
Electric Current (2) • It is conventional to assign to the current the same direction as the flow of positive charge • In electrical conductors, the direction ofthe current is opposite the direction of flow of electrons • Itis common to refer to a moving charge(positive or negative) as a mobile charge carrier
Microscopic Model of Current • We can relate current to the motion of the charge carriers by describing a microscopic model of conduction in a metal • The volume of a section of the conductor of length is • If n represents thenumber of mobile charge carriers per unit volume, the number of carriers in the gray section is • If the charge of each carrier is q, total charge in the section is
Microscopic Model of Current (2) • If the carrier moves with the speed , the distance during is , thus • The average current in theconductoris • The speed of the charge carriers vdis an average speed called the drift speed
RESISTANCE AND OHM’S LAW • We know that average current is • The current density J • In some materials, the current density is proportional to the electric field: • The constant is called conductivity. It is well-known as ohm’s law • Materials that obey Ohm’s law is said to be ohmic
RESISTANCE AND OHM’S LAW (2) • The potential difference between a and b is • We can rewrite the current density as • Because then the potential difference • The quantity is called the resistance R of the conductor • The unit of R is ohm (volt/ampere)
RESISTANCE AND OHM’S LAW (3) • The inverse of conductivity is resistivity
A MODEL FOR ELECTRICAL CONDUCTION • This models describes the connection between resistivity and electron movement in conductor. • In absence of E, the electron moves randomly. The net movement is zero. Thus the drift velocity is zero (Fig. a) • An E modifies the random motion and causes the electrons to drift in a direction opposite that of E • The slight curvature in the paths shown in Fig.bresults from the acceleration of the electrons between collisions • Theacceleration of the electron is • The electron will gain velocity
A MODEL FOR ELECTRICAL CONDUCTION (2) • Suppose that vi=0 and is the average value of successive collision, then the drift velocity • The magnitude of the current density is • Comparing with ohm’s law
RESISTANCE AND TEMPERATURE • The resistivity of a metal varies approximately linearly with temperature according to the expression • The variation of resistanceas • T0 is normally 20o C
ELECTRICAL ENERGY AND POWER • When net positive charge moves from a to b, it gains electric potential energy . The chemical potential energy in battery decreases. • As the charge travels from c to d, it losses the electric potential energy due to the collision with resistor’s atom. • The rates is • The energy lost in resistor is equal energy transferred by battery
ELECTRICAL ENERGY AND POWER • The resistor’s voltage is , thus other formulas for energy in capacitor • A battery is an emf source
Resistor in Serial • Resistors connected in serial have the same flowing current I = I1 = I2 = I3 V = V1+ V2 + V3 I Rt= I1R1 + I2R2 + I3R3 V Rt= R1 + R2 + R3
Resistor in Parallel • Resistors in parallel have the same voltage’s magnitude • V = V1 = V2 = V3 • It = I1 + I2 + I3 • V/Rt = V/R1 + V/R2 + V/R3 • 1/Rt = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 V