Applied Physics: Instructor: Ayesha Siddique
Applied Physics: Instructor: Ayesha Siddique
• It may be noted that an equipotential surface may be the surface of a material body
or a surface drawn in an electric field.
• Some important properties of equipotential surfaces :.
• Work done in moving a charge over an equipotential surface is zero.
• The electric field is always perpendicular to an equipotential surface.
• The spacing between equipotential surfaces enables us to identify regions of strong
and weak fields.
• Two equipotential surfaces can never intersect. If two equipotential surfaces could
intersect, then at the point of intersection there would be two values of electric
potential which is not possible.
DETERMINING FIELD FROM POTENTIAL
-CONTINUE
DETERMINING FIELD FROM POTENTIAL
-CONTINUE
DETERMINING FIELD FROM POTENTIAL
-CONTINUE
ELECTRIC CURRENT
• Electric current is defined as the rate at which charge flows through a surface
(the cross section of a wire, for example).
CURRENT = CHARGE / TIME
I = Q/T
• DIRECTION IS
OPPOSITE OF
ELECTRON FLOW.
QUESTION:
WHAT IS REQUIRED IN ORDER TO HAVE AN ELECTRIC
CURRENT FLOW IN A CIRCUIT?
ANSWER:
1. A VOLTAGE SOURCE.
2. THE CIRCUIT MUST BE CLOSED.
BATTERY (CHEMICAL CELL):
• A DEVICE THAT CONVERTS CHEMICAL ENERGY TO
ELECTRICITY.
• A BATTERY PROVIDES A POTENTIAL ENERGY DIFFERENCE
(VOLTAGE SOURCE).
• DIRECT • ALTERNATING
CURRENT CURRENT
• DC • AC
• PROVIDED BY • PROVIDED BY
BATTERIES POWER
COMPANIES
AMMETER
• MEASURES ELECTRIC
CURRENT.
• MUST BE PLACED IN
SERIES.
VOLTAGE SOURCES
• Voltage Source: A device which provides a
potential difference in order to keep current
flowing
• Dry/Wet Cells: Convert chemical energy to
electrical energy
• Generators: Convert mechanical energy to
electrical energy
• The voltage available to electrons moving
between terminals is called electromotive force,
or emf.
VOLTAGE SOURCES
NOTE:
THEREFORE:
CURRENT = VOLTAGE/RESISTANCE
OR
I = V/R
• THE RATIO OF VOLTAGE AND ELECTRICAL CURRENT IN A CLOSED CIRCUIT:
• VARIES IN TERMS OF CUBE OF THE RATIO
• VARIES EXPONENTIALLY
• VARIES LINEARLY
• REMAINS CONSTANT
• AN ELECTRIC MOTOR RATED AT 4600 WATT IS CONNECTED TO 240 V SINGLE PHASE , 2 WIRE CIRCUIT WHAT IS
THE CURRENT FLOW IN THE CIRCUIT?
• 7.5 AMPERES
• 12 AMPERES
• 15 AMPERES
• 10 AMPERES
• INCORRECT
• ANSWER: 15 AMPERES
• CURRENT I = P / E
• = 4600 / 240
• = 15 AMPERES
• IN AN ELECTRICAL CIRCUIT, WHAT HAPPEN TO THE CURRENT FLOWING
THROUGH THE WIRE IF VOLTAGE IS REDUCED TO THE HALF AND RESISTANCE
OF THE WIRE IS DOUBLED:
• HALF
• A QUARTER
• DOUBLE
• FOUR TIMES
VOLTAGE
• Potential difference between
two points
• Either side of a voltage source is
not an eqipotential surface
• A wire is an equipotential surface
• It has the same potential
• If the wire is attached to a voltage
source it is still an equipotential
surface
CURRENT’S DIRECTION
• ELECTRONS TRAVEL FROM – TO +
• CURRENT IS ACTUALLY THE OPPOSITE
DIRECTION OF THE FLOW OF ELECTRONS
Example: 3.8x1021 electrons pass through a point in a wire in 4
minutes. What was the average current?
Q Ne
Iav
t t
Iav
3.8 10 21
1.6 10 19
4 60
Iav 2.53A
29
Current Density
30
dA
A
If J is constant and parallel to dA (like in a wire), then
I
I
surface
J dA J
surface
dA JA J
A
volume
The total amount of charge passing through A is the number of
charges times the charge of each.
vt
v Q nqvt A
q A
34
Currents in Materials
-
just one inside a
electron conductor
shown, for
simplicity
36
Example: the 12-gauge copper wire in a home has a cross-
sectional area of 3.31x10-6 m2 and carries a current of 10 A.
The conduction electron density in copper is 8.49x1028
electrons/m3. Calculate the drift speed of the electrons.
I
vd
nqA
I
vd
neA
10 C/s
vd
(8.49 1028 m-3 )(1.60 1019 C)(3.31106 m 2 )
R = V/I
SCALAR
UNITS: OHM [Ω] =
[V/A]
• RESISTANCE CAN BE CALCULATED FOR ANY OBJECT.
• GOOD CONDUCTOR – LOW RESISTANCE
• POOR CONDUCTOR –HIGH RESISTANCE
• ALL CIRCUIT ELEMENTS HAVE
SOME RESISTANCE.
THE RESISTANCE OF
CONNECTING WIRE LEADS
IS CONSIDERED NEGLIGIBLE.
RESISTANCE
THE GEOMETRY OF THE RESISTOR MATTERS
L Length
R=ρ
A Area
l
Is proportional to l
R
And inversely proportional to A
The constant ρ (rho)
Is known as the resistivity.
A
Increasing the cross-sectional area
increases the number of available electrons.
RESISTIVITY
a. DA = 4 DB
b. DA = 2 DB
c. DA = DB
d. DA = ½ DB
e. DA = ¼ DB
l
R
A
A WIRE OF RESISTANCE R IS STRETCHED UNIFORMLY (KEEPING ITS VOLUME
CONSTANT) UNTIL IT IS TWICE ITS ORIGINAL LENGTH. WHAT HAPPENS TO THE
RESISTANCE?
a. IT INCREASES BY A FACTOR 4
b. IT INCREASES BY A FACTOR 2
c. IT STAYS THE SAME
d. IT DECREASES BY A FACTOR 2
e. IT DECREASES BY A FACTOR 4
Find the resistance of a piece of copper with a diameter
of 1 mm and a length of 1 cm
-8 -2
l (3 x 10 )(1 x 10 ) 12
R = = x 10 -4
A ( (.5 x 10 )
-3 2
Bolbo the gold broker from Baghdad has just received a gold
bullion bar for his birthday from his brother Bob. The face of the
bar is 5 cm on both sides, and the length is 20 cm. The resistance
between faces A and B is measured to be 0.8 micro-ohms. Bolbo
the broker assumes that the bullion is gold if the measured
resistance is within +/- 10% of the theoretical value. Is the
material gold or is it bogus?
R L / A B
5 cm
(2.4 x108 m)(.2m) / .052 m 2 ) 20 c
m A
1.92 x106