1 / 23

Ohm’s Law

Ohm’s Law. Physics 102 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 14. PAL #13 Capacitors. What is the charge stored on the capacitor? Jury-rig a replacement out of metal foil and Teflon coating (k = 2.1, thickness = 0.01 mm). C = ke 0 A/d A = Cd/ ke 0 = (5X10 -6 )(0.00001)/(2.1)(8.85X10 -12 )

dougal
Télécharger la présentation

Ohm’s Law

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. Ohm’s Law Physics 102 Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 14

  2. PAL #13 Capacitors • What is the charge stored on the capacitor? • Jury-rig a replacement out of metal foil and Teflon coating (k = 2.1, thickness = 0.01 mm). • C = ke0A/d • A = Cd/ke0 = (5X10-6)(0.00001)/(2.1)(8.85X10-12) • How can such a device be portable?

  3. Circuit Theory • There are three key variables used in circuit theory: • DV provides energy and causes charges to move • Energy can be extracted from the current due to resistance (symbol: R)

  4. Current • The current is the flow rate of charge and is defined as: • The units are amperes (amps) or coulombs per second • The most common charge carrier is the electron

  5. Inside a Wire • What goes on inside a current carrying wire? • An applied potential difference makes them want to move in a certain direction (against the field) • They undergo many collisions and move in a random walk

  6. Drift Speed • We can find the drift speed in terms of the properties of the wire: • Where I is the current, n is the electron density, q is the charge on the electron and A is the cross sectional area of the wire

  7. Electron Motion

  8. Current Conundrums • The drift speed is very small (~mm per second), yet the effect of current is felt instantaneously • Electrons move randomly, yet current flows in only one direction • The direction of the current is opposite the motion of the electrons

  9. emf • A battery maintains a potential difference across its terminals which can do work by moving charge • The amount of work done by a battery is just the amount of charge moved times the emf W = DQE

  10. Resistivity • Why? • The materials resist the flow of current • Good conductors have low resistivity, good insulators have high resitivities

  11. Resistance • The total resistance of the material also depends on its size • The resistance can be written as: R = r (L/A) • The units of resistance are ohms (volts per ampere)

  12. Ohm’s Law • How much current do you get if you put a potential difference V across a wire with resistance R? I = V/R • This relationship is called Ohm’s Law V = IR • Ohm’s law is very important, memorize it! • However, the law only holds for certain types of materials (called ohmic)

  13. Simple Circuit

  14. Using Ohm’s Law • Ohm’s law quantifies the way circuits work • Can write in different ways: • V = IR • I = V/R

  15. Today’s PAL • A 1.5 volt battery produces 167 A of current when connected to a 1 meter long, 2 mm thick wire. What is the wire made of? • Discuss the validity of the following claim: • “The relationship R = V/I tells us that the resistance of a wire is directly proportional to the potential difference applied to it.”

  16. Temperature and Resistance • Electronic devices get hot! • Temperature also affects electronic properties • This increased random motion means collisions are more frequent and it is harder for current to flow

  17. Superconductivity • If we set up a current in a wire and then take away the battery the current fades to zero • If the resistance was zero the current would keep flowing even without a battery • Such materials are called superconductors • Resistance generally decreases with decreasing T

  18. Energy in Electric Circuits • As the charges flow (as current) they convert the potential energy to kinetic energy • We should be able to relate the potential difference, current and resistance to the energy produced

  19. Energy Dispersion Rate • Each charge that passes through the battery gains energy that it will later lose as heat • Each charge then gives up its energy so the total power (energy per second) depends on the rate of charge flow or current IDV = P

  20. Power • Using Ohm’s law (DV = IR) we can write: P = I2R and P = (DV)2/R • Current and power can then be computed

  21. Lightbulbs • A common circuit element is the lightbulb • Household lightbulbs are rated in watts • In the US, most power outlets produce 120 volts of potential difference • Those that do not use a transformer

  22. Joule Heating • The conversion of electrical energy into heat is called joule heating • Joule heating is seen in the natural world: • Can produce energy in the Earth’s atmosphere

  23. Next Time • Read 21.4-21.5 • Homework Ch 21, P: 24, 26, 42 • Final: • Section 1: Tuesday, Feb 25, 9-11 am • Section 2: Thursday, Feb 27, Noon-2pm

More Related