Electricity Flashcards
Define current (I)
The rate of flow of charge
How do you work out the number of electrons carrying a charge (eg 10C)?
Divide charge by the charge of each electron (1.6x10-19)
What is the difference between conventional current and electron flow?
Conventional current flows from the +ve terminal to the -ve terminal
Electron flow shows the direction the electrons flow, from -ve to +ve
How is the current in a circuit related to potential difference and resistance?
Increasing potential difference increases the current
Increasing resistance decreases the current
What is Ohm’s law?
The current flowing through a metallic conductor is proportional to the potential difference applied across it at constant temperature
When does Ohm’s law apply?
When the component has a fixed resistance (eg a fixed resistor at a constant temperature, or a filament at a low current)
Define potential difference
The work done (energy transferred) by each coulomb of charge moving between two points
(Eg a 12V battery adds 12J of energy to each coulomb of charge passing through)
How does a circuit ‘short circuit’?
If there is an available path with 0 resistance
Current → ∞
And the circuit heats up
What is the I-V graph for a fixed resistor?
What is the I-V graph for a filament bulb?
What is the graph for a semiconductor diode?
What’s wrong with this?
Resistance is not calculated using the gradient (of a tangent) of an I-V graph!!!
Instead just use the voltage and current at that point
Explain the shape of the I-V graph for a filament
As current increases, temperature of filament increases
This increases lattice ion vibrations.
Which increases the number of collisions per second with electrons.
So resistance increases.
How does the I-V graph for a fixed resistor prove it is ohmic?
The straight line passing through the origin
proves that current ∝ voltage
Explain the shape of the semiconductor diode (in positive bias)
- As the potential difference increases weakly bound electrons in the conductor gain energy
- After the threshold pd, some electrons become free to carry a current
- The lattice vibrations still increase but this is less significant
What happens if a semiconductor diode is connected in reverse bias?
No current flows until the breakdown voltage is reached (~50V)
The diode breaks and all current flows through
What is the difference between a series and a parallel circuit?
Parallel circuits have junctions (3 or more wires connect)
Why doesn’t adding voltmeters in parallel affect the circuit? (it is still series)
Voltmeters have ~ ∞ R so no current flows through