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Electrostatics. Electrostatics: the study of electricity at rest involves electric charges, the forces between them, and their behavior in materials Ex: getting shocked by door handle, hair sticking up when putting on a sweater in the winter. Four Important Facts About Atoms.
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Electrostatics Electrostatics: the study of electricity at rest involves electric charges, the forces between them, and their behavior in materials Ex: getting shocked by door handle, hair sticking up when putting on a sweater in the winter
Four Important Facts About Atoms • Every atom has a (+) charged nucleus surrounded by (-) charged electrons. • All electrons are identical • The nucleus is composed of protons and neutrons. All protons are identical. All neutrons are identical. • Atoms usually have equal numbers of protons and electrons so their net charge is zero.
Electrical Forces and Charges • An electrical force is a force that one charge exerts on another. • Electrical forces are stronger than gravitational forces. • Electrical forces arise from the particles inside an atom
Charge: the fundamental electrical property to which mutual attractions or repulsions b/w electrons or protons is attributed. • Like charges repel; opposites charges attract • SI Unit: coulomb (C) • There are 6.24 X 1018 electrons in one coulomb • Ex: 2 electrons push away from each other, an electron and a proton are attracted and pull towards each other
Conservation of Charge • Atoms remain neutral by maintaining equal numbers of (+) and (-) charges. • A charged atom is called an ion. • An imbalance of charge is produced by adding or removing electrons.
The Law of Conservation of Charge: Charge cannot be created or destroyed • Charges can only move from one atom/object to another • Ex: If you rub a rubber rod with a piece of fur, electrons are transferred from the fur to the rod. The fur becomes (+) charged, the rod becomes (-) charged.
Check Your Understanding If you scuff electrons onto your feet while walking across a rug, are you negatively or positively charged? • Negatively charged. You are adding electrons to yourself. Is the rug negatively or positively charged? • Positively charged. You are taking electrons away from the rug, making the rug less negative…and therefore more positive.
Coulomb’s Law Coulomb’s Law: the relationship among electrical force, charges, and distance. The electrical force b/w 2 charges varies directly as the product of the charges and inversely as the square of the distance b/w them. • The bigger the charges, the bigger the electrical force • The further apart the charges, the less the electrical force • SI Unit: Newtons (N)
Equation: F = k(q1q2) d2 • F = electrical force (Newtons) • k = electrical force constant • q1 = charge 1 (coulomb) • q2 = charge 2 (coulomb) • d = distance b/w charges (meters)
Check Your Understanding If you double one charge, what happens to the electrical force? • It doubles If you double both charges, what happens to the electrical force? • It quadruples If you double the distance between the charges, but the charges remain the same, what happens to the electrical force? • It is cut to 1/4th.
Conductors and Insulators • Whether a substance is classified as a conductor or an insulator depends on how strongly the atoms of the substance hold their electrons. • A conductor is a material through which electrical charge can flow. • Metals are good conductors b/c the electrons are loosely bound. • An insulator is a material through which electrical charge cannot flow. • Plastics are good insulators b/c the electrons are tightly bound.
A semiconductor behaves as both an insulator and a conductor. • Transistors are examples of semiconductors. • Certain metal, at absolute zero, acquire infinite conductivity. These metals are called superconductors. • Once electric current is established in superconductor, the electrons flow indefinitely.
Check Your Understanding Is aluminum a good conductor or insulator of electricity? • A good conductor. Good heat conductors are generally good electrical conductors. Are the electrons tightly or loosely bound then? • Loosely bound. The electrons’ ability to “bump” into each other allows electricity to travel.
Check Your Understanding Is water a good conductor or insulator of electricity? • A good conductor of electricity. That’s why it is so dangerous to have electrical devices near water; the water can carry the electricity from the device to you, thereby electrocuting you.
Check Your Understanding Why are some electrical wires made to have copper wires wrapped in rubber? • B/c copper is a good conductor, moving electricity from the outlet to the device. It is wrapped in rubber b/c rubber is a good insulator, preventing the electricity from leaving the wire and entering your body.