Mechanical and Elecrical System
Mechanical and Elecrical System
CHAPTER 5
5.1 : ELECTRICAL DISTRIBUTION
Important terminology
Coulomb (C):
The basic unit used to measure electric charge.
Joule (J):
A joule is the work done by a constant 1-N force applied
distance.
through a 1-m
Joule (J)
One joule can also be defined as:
The work required to move an electric charge of one
coulomb through an electrical potential difference of one
volt, or one '"coulomb volt" (CV). This relationship can be
used to define the volt.
The work required to produce one watt of power for one
second, or one "watt second" (Ws) (compare kilowatt
hour). This relationship can be used to define the watt.
Important terminology
Ampere (A): One ampere or amp is the current that flows when 1
Coulomb of charge passes each second (1 A = 1 C/s)
Volt (V):
Watt (W):
Quantity
Basic unit
Symbol
length
Luminous
intensity
mass
kilogram
kg
time
second
Electric current
ampere
Thermodynamic
temperature
Kelvin/ Celsius
K/C
Luminous
intensity
Candela
cd
Charge
-Electricity is any effect resulting from the presence and/or movement
of electrical charges.
- Electrical charge is property of the atomic particles,
- measured in Coulomb (C)
Battery (source of electromotive force, emf)
+
Conducting wire
(atoms within)
+
Motion of charge
10
Electric Current
An electric current is the flow of electric charges.
Conventionally this is the flow of positive charge.
In a simple circuit such as that illustrated, the current in the wire
11
Electric Current
Electric current is the time rate of change of
dq
i
dt
Current is measured in amperes (A),
1 ampere = 1 coulomb/second
12
Kirchhoffs Laws
The algebraic sum of all electric currents into and out of
13
Electric Current
Two common types of current are;
14
Voltage
Some work or energy transfer is required to move the electron in a
15
P = energy/time = W/t
P VI
16
= E
x I
Or,
P = (I x R) x I = I2R
Or,
P = E x (E/R) = E2/R
17
+
V
I
Power absorbed by resistor
18
19
V = I R or
Where:
I = V/R
or
R = V/I
20
L
R
A
cross - sectional area, A
21
Resistivity (.m)
Usage
Silver
1.64 x 10^-8
Conductor
Cooper
1.72x10^-8
Conductor
Aluminum
2.8x10^-8
Conductor
Gold
2.45x10^-8
Semiconductor
Carbon
4x10^-5
Semiconductor
Germanium
47x10^-2
Semiconductor
Silicon
6.4x10^2
Semiconductor
Paper
10^10
Insulator
Mica
5x10^11
Insulator
Glass
10^12
Insulator
Teflon
3x10^12
Insulator
22
Resistivity (.m)
Usage
Silver
1.64 x 10^-8
Conductor
Cooper
1.72x10^-8
Conductor
Aluminum
2.8x10^-8
Conductor
Gold
2.45x10^-8
Semiconductor
Carbon
4x10^-5
Semiconductor
Germanium
47x10^-2
Semiconductor
Silicon
6.4x10^2
Semiconductor
Paper
10^10
Insulator
Mica
5x10^11
Insulator
Glass
10^12
Insulator
Teflon
3x10^12
Insulator
23
Resistivity (.m)
Usage
Silver
1.64 x 10^-8
Conductor
Cooper
1.72x10^-8
Conductor
Aluminum
2.8x10^-8
Conductor
Gold
2.45x10^-8
Semiconductor
Carbon
4x10^-5
Semiconductor
Germanium
47x10^-2
Semiconductor
Silicon
6.4x10^2
Semiconductor
Paper
10^10
Insulator
Mica
5x10^11
Insulator
Glass
10^12
Insulator
Teflon
3x10^12
Insulator
24
1
G
R
It measures of how well an element will conduct electric current.
The unit for conductance is Siemens (S), and previously called mho
25
Measurement Equipment
multimeter
ammeter
ohmmeter
megger
voltmeter
Watt-hour
wattmeter meter
26
between two points in a circuit so that the current is the same through
each series component. The total resistance of a series circuit is equal to
the sum of the resistances of each individual resistor.
R1
R2
R3
+ V1 - + V2 - + V3 -
RN
Rseries
+ VN -
+VVs
Vs
(a)
(b)
units :
Current :
VS
I
RT
27
Vs
I
I1
+
V1
-
I2
+
R1 V
2
R2
IN
+
VN RN
Rparallel
+V-
Vs
(a)
(b)
28
1
1
1
1
1
1
...
R T R equivalent R 1 R 2 R 3
RN
1
1
1
1
RT
...
R
R
R
R
2
3
N
1
Current:
I I1 I 2 I 3 ... I N
29
Exercise
R 2 = 10
R1=5
R 3 = 15
Calculate:
RT R1 R2 R3
Total resistance RT
Total current , I
5 10 15
30
150V
V1, V2 and V3
Solutions:
RT R1 R2 R3 5 10 15 30
Vs 150V
I
5A
RT 30
V
I
R
VN
RN
V2 5 x10 50V
V3 5 x15 75V
30
connections can be broken up into smaller parts that are either one or
the other,
Assignment
answer
i. the current flow through each light
(0.15A,05A,0.5A)
ii. the total resistance of the circuit, (RT=920)
iii. the total energy consumed in a year,
(402.96kW)
iv. the cost of electrical energy for the year
(assume 365 days per year) if the lights have
been used for 8 hour per day (based on
$0.286/kWh). ($115.25)
Exercise 2
One 100W lamp and one 200W lamp are plugged into a