8 : Charge and current Flashcards
Electrical current
- Measured in amperes
- the rate of flow of charge
- l= change in charge / change in time
- the amount of charge passing a given point in a circuit per unit time
Electrical charge
- It is a physical property much like mass volume or temperature.
- Any object with no charge is called neutral.
- There are two types of charge positive and negative objects with charge, interact and exert forces on each other
- like charges repel an opposite charges attract.
Measuring charge
- Measured in coulombs
Electric charge flowing past a point in one second when there is an electric current of one ampere - charge= current / change in time
- any particle that has an electric charge is a charge carrier
- relative charges = +1 or -2
- elementary charges, e=1.6 x 10^ -19 C
Net charge
- Charge on object as being quantised
- Q = + or- ne
- Q is the net charge
Electric current in metals
- Because of way atoms are bonded in a metal most electrons remain fixed but small number from each atom are free to move
- structure ora metal can be thought of as a regular crystal structure or lattice of positive ions surrounded by a number of free electrons
- positive ions are not free to move but vibrate around fixed points
- to make electrons move is to make one end of a wire positive and the other negative - electrons will be attracted towards positive end
A larger current may be due to
The greater rate of flow of charge the greater the electric current
- a greater number of electrons moving past a given point each second (greater cross-sectional area )
- same number of electrons moving faster through metal
Conventional current and electron wheels
- Conventional current is the current from the positive terminal towards a negative terminal
- in metals elections travel from the negative terminal to the positive terminal - but this flow of electrons is in the opposite direction to the conventional current
Electrical current in electrolytes
Electrolytes are liquids that can carry an electric current - not a flow of electrons but flow of ions
- positive electrode (anode) and negative electrode (cathode) are placed in solution -the ions are attracted to the electrodes
Conservation of charge
- electric charge can neither be created nor destroyed
- the total amount of electric charge in the universe is constant
Kirchhoff first law
- Any point in an electrical circuit, the sum of currents into that point is equal to the sum of currents out of that point
- charge carriers into point in a given time must be equal to the total number of charge carriers lowing that same point during that time
Classification of materials
- The number density is in the number of free electrons per cubic metre of material. the higher the number density the greater the number of free electrons per m^3 and so the better the electrical conductor
- conductors have very high number density
- semiconductors have much lower number density than metals so in order to carry same current electrons must travel much faster which increases the temperature
How fast do charge carriers move
-Most charge carriers move slowly
- free electrons repeatedly collide with the positive metal ions as they drift through the wire towards the positive terminal
- all the free elections in the wire start moving almost at once
Mean drift velocity
I= Anev
- A = cross sectional area
-I = electrical current
- v= mean drift velocity
Effect of changing cross sectional area
- Area changes so must the right velocity the narrower the wire the greater the drift velocity must be in order for the current to be the same