Chapter 20-21 Flashcards
Two kinds of charges:
- positive and negative
Fundamental Law of Electric Charge
- Opposite electric charges attract each other
- Similar electric charges repel each other.
- Charged objects attract some neutral objects.
- the source of electric charges:
the atom.
Structure of the atom:
- A simple view is that the atom has a positively charged nucleus with negatively charged electrons moving about the nucleus. Normally, the number of positive and negative charges are equal so the atom is electrically neutral. Since protons, which are positively charged, are tightly bound together in the nucleus by the strong nuclear force, they do not move. In solids, atoms do not move. So all/ charges in solids are due to the movement of electrons: i…, Atoms gain or lose electrons and become ionized. Positively charged objects have a deficit of electrons and negatively charged objects have an excess of electrons.
If a plastic ruler is rubbed with cloth, where do electrons move?
electrons move from the cloth to the ruler because the atoms of the cloth hold electrons less tightly than the atoms of the ruler do, so some leave the cloth and go onto the ruler, resulting in a negatively charged ruler and a positively charged cloth.
Why is there much more static electricity on dry days than on humid ones?
- the excess electrons eventually “leak off” the charged object and go back to the object with a deficit via water molecules (which are polar molecules) in the air. Thus there is much more static electricity on dry days than on humid ones, because objects can hold charge much longer.
There is a law of conservation of charge.
When you understand that charge is due to the movement of electrons it makes sense. The electrons do not disappear, they simply move. So when you charge an object (e.g. comb with hair), the comb becomes negatively charged and the hair becomes positively charged with exactly the same amount of charge.
The symbol for electric charge is
“Q”
- Units for electric charge:
Most common one is the coulomb (C).
- The smallest known charge is the amount on an electron or a proton.
→ called the elementary charge
The symbol for the elementary charge
is “e”. e = 1.602 × 10^-19 C.
Charge on electrons and protons
- The charge on an electron is -e; the charge on a proton is +e.
Conductors
are solids in which electrons are able to easily travel from one atom to another.
→ have 1, 2, or 3 electrons in the outer shell, so they are quite loosely held
→ includes most metals - best conductors are silver, copper, aluminum, and gold
Insulators
are solids in which electrons are not free to move easily from atom to atom.
→ insulators which are elements have 5, 6, 7, or 8 electrons in the outer shell, so they are tightly held
→ most good insulators are compounds rather than individual elements - the outer electrons are bound up in chemical bonds with other atoms
→ examples: plastic, cork, glass, wood, rubber -
Semiconductors
are in between. They will not conduct naturally, but with a certain voltage applied, they will conduct.
→ have 4 electrons in the outer shell
→ used to make electronic components such as diodes, transistors, and integrated circuits
→ examples: silicon, germanium, and carbon