1 / 55

Electrical Basics

Electrical Basics. Power & Ohm’s Law. Group 1. Work together to understand the information in your section. You will have 10 minutes to review the material and present it to the class.

bloomer
Download Presentation

Electrical Basics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Electrical Basics Power & Ohm’s Law

  2. Group 1 • Work together to understand the information in your section. • You will have 10 minutes to review the material and present it to the class.

  3. With some applied force, electrons will move from a negatively charged atom to a positively charged atom. This flow of electrons between atoms is called current. Current is represented by the symbol I Current

  4. When there is a lack of electrons at one end of a conductor and an abundance at the other end, current will flow through the conductor. This difference in “pressure” is referred to as voltage. This “pressure” is sometimes referred to as “electromotive force” or EMF. Voltage is represented by the symbolE Voltage

  5. Resistance is the opposition to the flow of electrons (aka “current”). Every material offers some resistance. Conductors offer very low resistance. Insulators offer high resistance. Resistance is represented by the Symbol R Resistance is measured in OhmsΩ Resistance

  6. Measuring Current • Current is measured by literally counting the number of electrons that pass a given point. • Current will be the same at any point of a wire. • The basic unit for counting electrons is the "coulomb“. (French physicist Charles Augustin de Coulomb in 1780’s)

  7. Measuring Current (cont) • 1 coulomb = 6.24 x 1018 electrons = 6,240,000,000,000,000,000 = more than 6 billion billion electrons! If 1 coulomb of electrons go by each second, then we say that the current is 1 "ampere" or 1 amp (Named after André-Marie Ampère, 1826)

  8. Measuring Voltage • Voltage is measured in volts. • A voltage of 1 volt means that 1 "Joule" of energy is being delivered for each coulomb of charge that flows through the circuit. • A “Joule” is the basic unit of energy in the metric system - its about the amount of energy it takes to lift two pounds a height of 9 inches. (Named after James Prescott Joule)

  9. Measuring Resistance • Resistance is measured in ohms. • Symbolized with the letter “R” or with the symbol “Ω” (Named after the German physicist Georg Ohm, 1827)

  10. Key Terms • Conductor • Allows the Flow of Electrons • Insulator- • Stops/ Minimizes the Flow of Electrons • Resistor • Resists the Flow of Electrons • Semi-Conductor • Acts as both a Conductor / Insulator • Diode • Stops the flow of Electrons in one direction • Capacitor • Stores excess voltage • Shunt • Redirects the Flow of Electrons when triggered

  11. Key Conversions • Standard Test Conditions (STC) A set of reference measurement conditions. (25° C, or 77° F, 1000 W/m2, AM1.5 (air mass) ) • 1 Meter = 3.28 Feet • 1 cm = .3937 Inches • 1 Amp x 1 Volt = 1 Watt (Power) • 1 HP = 746 Watts • Standard Operating Conditions (NOC) A more realistic set of reference conditions. (25° C or 77° F, 800 W/m2, 1 m/s wind speed)

  12. Key Conversions • Degrees Fahrenheit = (1.8 x C°) + 32 • Degrees Celsius = (F° – 32) x 0.555 • 1 Langley = 2.065 W/m2 (Unit of energy distribution over an area. This unit is used to measure solarirradiation or “insolation”. • 1 kWh/m2 = 3.6 MJ/m2

  13. Group 2 • Work together to understand the information in your section. • You will have 10 minutes to review the material and present it to the class.

  14. OHM’S LAW

  15. Ohm’s Law How is resistance, voltage, & current related? E = I R Or… E = I x R where: E = voltage in volts I = current in amps R = resistance in ohms

  16. Ohm’s Law Using E = I R E = .003 (I) x 3,000 (R) E = 9 volts (or 9 v) By the way... “milli” = 1/1000 So a milli-Amp Is 1/1000 of an amp 1mA = 1/1000A or .001A

  17. Ohm’s Law • What if you know the voltage & resistance but not the current? • What if you know the voltage & current but not the resistance?

  18. Ohm’s Law • Knowing any 2 values, E, I, or R one can find the 3rd one by simple algebraic manipulation of the formula E= I x R • DEFINITIONS: >An arithmetic operation is +, -, x, or ÷ >The opposite operation of: + is – x is ÷ - is + ÷ is x

  19. Ohm’s Law To manipulate the formula E = I / R… RULE: Whatever arithmetic operation is done to one side of the equation must be done to the other side. So… E = I x R Becomes… I = E / R or R = E / I

  20. Ohm’s Law By the way... “k” = 1000 So… 3k = 3,000 3kA = 3,000 amps 3kV = 3,000 volts 3kΩ = 3,000 ohms R = E / I R = 9 (E) / .003 (I) R = 3,000 ohms (or 3k ohms or 3k Ω)

  21. Ohm’s Law I = E / R I = 9 (E) / 3,000 (R) I = .003 amps (or .003A or 3 milliamps or 3 mA)

  22. Ohm’s Law (cont) • For those who are not comfortable with algebra, there's a trick to remembering how to solve for any one quantity, given the other two...

  23. Ohm’s Law (cont)

  24. Group 3 • Work together to understand the information in your section. • You will have 10 minutes to review the material and present it to the class.

  25. Power • Sometimes we want to know the rate at which energy is delivered, not how much energy is delivered per coulomb of charge. • The rate at which energy is delivered is calledpower. • Power is defined as: Power = Energy / Time.

  26. Power • The unit of power corresponding to 1 joule per second is called a “watt”. • 1 watt = 1 joule per second.

  27. Power Remember… • Voltage “V” tells us the number of joules per coulomb • Current tells us the number of coulombs per second So… Power = number of watts = number of joules/second  = joules/coulomb x coulombs/second = V x I

  28. Power Or the power formula… P = I x V Or P = IV Where P = power in watts (W) I = current in amps (A) V = voltage in volts (V)

  29. Power • What if you know the power & voltage but not the current? • What if you know the power & current but not the voltage?

  30. Power • Knowing any 2 values, P, I, or E, one can find the 3rd one by simple algebraic manipulation of the formula P=I E • DEFINITIONS: >An arithmetic operation is +, -, x, or ÷ >The opposite operation of: + is – x is ÷ - is + ÷ is x

  31. Power To manipulate the formula P = I x E… RULE: whatever arithmetic operation is done to one side of the equation must be done to the other side. So… P = I x E Becomes… I = P / E or E = P / I

  32. Power • Additional Power Formulas

  33. Group 4 • Work together to understand the information in your section. • You will have 10 minutes to review the material and present it to the class.

  34. SERIESDCCIRCUITS & PARALLEL DC CIRCUITS

  35. What are “series” & “parallel” circuits? • Two basic ways to connect more than two circuit components: series & parallel. • These components can be electronic components such as resistors & capacitors or they can be power sources such as batteries, solar cells, or solar modules.

  36. SERIES CIRCUITS • The defining characteristic of a series power circuit is that there is only one path for electrons to flow. • The power sources are connected end-to-end in a line to form a single path for electrons to flow…

  37. Series Rule #1 • The total output current(measured in amps) is equal to the individual power source. By the way... “milli” = 1/1000 So a milli-amp (mA) Is 1/1000 of an amp 150 mA 150 mA 150 mA 150 mA

  38. Series Rule #2 The total output voltage (measured in volts) is equal to the sum of the individual power sources. 150 mA 150 mA 150 mA 150 mA

  39. Series Power Sources 150 mA Each cell?

  40. Series Power Sources Total? Each solar panel = 4 VDC @ 100mA

  41. Parallel Circuits • The defining characteristic of a parallel power circuit isthat all the positive terminals are connected together and all the negative terminals are connected together…

  42. Parallel Circuits Parallel Rule #1 • The total output current(measured in amps) is equal to the sum of the currents of the individual power sources. 1.5 VDC 1.5 VDC 1.5 VDC 150 mA 150 mA 150 mA

  43. Parallel Circuits Parallel Rule #2 • The total output voltage(measured in volts) is equal to the voltage of the individual power sources. 1.5 VDC 1.5 VDC 1.5 VDC 150 mA 150 mA 150 mA

  44. Parallel Circuits 600 mA Each cell?

  45. Parallel Circuits Total? Each solar panel = 4 VDC @ 100mA

  46. Series or Parallel?

  47. SERIES / PARALLEL CIRCUITS • We can have circuits that are a combination of series and parallel to increase both amperage (current) and voltage…

  48. SERIES / PARALLEL CIRCUITS Each solar panel = 4 VDC @ 100mA

  49. RULE SUMMARY: Series Circuits • The total output current(measured in amps) is equal to the individual power source. • The total output voltage(measured in volts) is equal to the sum of the individual power sources.

  50. RULE SUMMARY: Parallel Circuits • The total output current(measured in amps) is equal to the sum of the currents of the individual power sources. • The total output voltage(measured in volts) is equal to the voltage of the individual power sources.

More Related