Electricity practical Flashcards
Required practical - investigate current - voltage graphs steps
Ensure that the power supply is set to zero at the start.
Record the reading on the voltmeter and ammeter.
Use the variable resistor to alter the potential difference.
Record the new readings on the voltmeter and ammeter.
Repeat steps three to four, each time increasing the potential difference slightly.
Reverse the power supply connections and repeat steps two to six.
Plot a graph of current against potential difference for each component.
Repeat the experiment but replace the fixed resistor with a bulb.
Required practical - investigate current - voltage graphs aims
To investigate the relationship between current and potential difference for a resistor, bulb and diode
Required practical - investigate current - voltage graphs evaluation - fixed resistor
For a fixed resistor, the potential difference is directly proportional to the current. Doubling the amount of energy into the resistor results in a current twice as fast running through the resistor. This relationship is called Ohm’s Law and is true because the resistance of the resistor is fixed and does not change. A resistor is an ohmic conductor
Required practical - investigate current - voltage graphs evaluation - filament bulb
In a filament bulb, the current does not increase as fast as the potential difference. Doubling the amount of energy does not cause a current twice as fast.
The more energy that is put into the bulb, the harder it is for the current to flow - the resistance of the bulb increases. As the potential difference increases, so does the temperature of the thin wire inside the bulb, the filament. The higher temperature increases the vibrations of the ions in the filament, which makes it harder for the electrons to get past.
Required practical - investigate current - voltage graphs - diode method
Set the variable resistor to give the lowest potential difference and record the readings on the voltmeter and milliammeter.
Alter the variable resistor to increase the potential difference by 0.2 V.
Record the new readings on the voltmeter and milliammeter.
Repeat steps three to four, each time increasing the current slightly.
Reverse the power supply connections and repeat steps two to six.
Plot a graph of current against potential difference for the diode
Required practical - investigate current - voltage graphs
A semiconductor diode only allows current to flow in one direction. If the potential difference is arranged to try and push the current the wrong way (also called reverse-bias) no current will flow as the diode’s resistance remains very large. Current will only flow if the diode is forward-biased. When forward-biased, the diode’s resistance is very large at low potential differences but at higher potential differences, the resistance quickly drops and current begins to flow.