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Exam 2 Lectures Circuits. Charges in Motion. Now we will start to talk about charges in motion instead of static charges Consider the three cases below A pipe of flowing water A wire without a potential difference A wire with a potential difference between the two ends. Definitions.
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Charges in Motion • Now we will start to talk about charges in motion instead of static charges • Consider the three cases below • A pipe of flowing water • A wire without a potential difference • A wire with a potential difference between the two ends
Definitions • Electric Current—charges in motion, or a stream of moving charges • Steady state—constant flow in time: for every electron entering, an electron must leave. • Ampere—unit of current 1 Amp = 1C/s • Current density—vector quantity which has the direction of E through a surface and magnitude of current per unit area. • Drift speed—speed electrons drift through a conductor with a current in it
Current • The flow of conduction electrons through a metal wire (conductor) • In steady state • Current I is a scalar not a vector
By convention the arrow is drawn in the direction (+) charges would move Current can be from the movement of electrons, positive ions, or both
Current Density • Current density • Current density is a vector and we must use vector math • The same direction as the E field in the wire • Relationship between J and E
Drift Speed • Electrons move in the direction opposite the E field with a drift speed vd • vd tiny compared to the random motion speed of 106 m/s from Brownian motion • Know how to find n (carrier density)
Batteries • Almost any 2 different solid conductors immersed in an active solution (electrolyte) functions as a battery • The chemical energy stored in the interatomic bonds is converted to electrical potential energy as the solution and the conductors become involved in the chemical reaction • The electrolyte is a solution which dissolves the ions formed by the leaving electrons allowing the ions to move in the solution • One of the conductors becomes the cathode (gains electrons) and the other becomes the anode (loses electrons) • A salt bridge is necessary for letting the ions flow
Batteries cont • emf—potential difference that can be used to supply energy and sustain a current. Also voltage measured across the terminals of the battery when no current is being drawn from or delivered to it • If the batteries are connected oppositely: + terminal to – terminal then the voltages subtract • For big i & low V – put battery cells in parallel. • For small i & big V – put battery cells in series. • For big i & big V – put rows of parallel battery cells in series
Definitions • Conductivity—the ability of a material to conduct electricity. is not necessarily a constant, it could be a tensor or it could be a function of E. • Resistivity—the inverse of conductivity • Resistance—the ability of a material to resist the flow of electric charge • Ohm—the unit of resistance. 1 = 1 V/A
Definitions cont • Resistors—devices in a circuit to control the current level in various parts of the circuit. Isotropic materials—materials whose electrical properties are the same in all directions (conductivity and resistivity) • Ohm’s Law—usually stated V = iR or J = E. Not all devices follow this law, some are not directly proportional to V (R a constant), for some R is a function of V (R = f(V)). (isotropic materials)
Resistivity is a property of the material, and resistance is a property of the object • Resistance depends on the geometry of the conductor (resistor)
Resistivity depends on the properties of the material and temperature
Ohm’s Law • Ohm’s law is true for many substances, but there are many materials and devices that are nonohmic • A device obeys Ohm’s law when its R is independent of the magnitude and polarity of V • A material obeys Ohm’s law when is independent of the magnitude and direction of E
Most modern electronic devices are nonohmic and their usefulness or proper operation depends on how they violate Ohm’s Law
For a resistor, resistance is a constant of proportionality between current and the voltage difference and is independent of V and i • For a resistor, resistance does not depend on either i or V, but on the properties of the material making up the resistor b) An ohmic device – a resistor c) A nonohmic device – a pn junction diode
No tolerance band – ±20% Silver band – ±10% Gold band – ±5%
Microscopic View of Ohm’s Law • Look at the motion of free conduction electrons
Different Types of Conductors • Conductors – materials that allow the flow of charge • Insulators – materials that don’t allow the flow of charge • Semiconductors—materials that are intermediate between conductors and insulators • Doping—adding minute amounts of impurities to semiconductors to change their resistivity. • Superconductors—materials with no resistance to the movement of electric charge through them
Energy Conduction Band Valance Band Conductor Semiconductor Insulator
Comparison Conductors to Semiconductors • Semiconductors have smaller n • Semiconductors have a much higher • Semiconductors temperature coefficient of resistivity is large and negative • In conductors n is large but nearly constant. As T increases, v increases and t decreases > o • In semiconductors t still decreases but n starts out small and increases fast with temperature. < o as n increases
Power • The power or the joule heating of the resistor is how fast a resistor heats up • The rate of energy transfer from battery to some other device • This energy could be a conversion of electrical potential energy to some other form of energy such as mechanical work, thermal energy, stored chemical energy, light or etc
Circuit Devices • Resistor – device in a circuit to control the current level in various parts of the circuit. • Capacitor – device in a circuit which store energy in an electric field • Battery – device in a circuit which produces a potential difference • Conductor – material through which current flows
Definitions • Ideal emf device—has no internal resistance and = potential difference between the terminals • Real emf device—does have internal resistance and > potential difference between the terminals (some energy lost probably as heat)
Emf Devices • An emf device does work on (transfers energy to) charge carriers • Energy comes from: • In batteries or fuel cells—chemical energy • In electric generator—mechanical forces • In thermopile—temperature differences • In solar cell—sun or solar energy • 2 ways to calculate the current i in a simple single loop circuit • Energy method • Potential method
Energy Method • Using conservation of energy
Potential Method • Using the potential differences • A battery from low to high potential from high to low potential • A resistor from low to high potential • from high to low potential
Using the sign of the first terminal • Battery • from low to high V • from high to low V • Resistor • from low to high V • from high to low V
Internal Resistance of Battery This internal resistance comes from the resistance of the internal components of the battery and is irremovable
Resistors in Series and Parallel • Resistors in Series • Resistors in Parallel
Circuit Facts & Kirchhoff’s Laws • If you have two batteries in a circuit, the battery with the larger emf determines the direction of the current • Loop Rule: the algebraic sum of the changes in potential encountered in a complete transversal of any loop of a circuit must be 0 (conservation of energy) • Junction Rule: the sum of the currents entering any junction must be equal to the sum of the currents leaving that junction (conservation of charge)
Meters • Ammeter—an instrument used to measure currents. In series & low resistance • Voltmeter—an instrument used to measure potential differences. In parallel & high resistance • Ohmmeter—an instrument used to measure resistance of an element. • Multimeter—a single meter which can measure all of the above
RC Circuits • RC circuit – circuit in which the current varies with time