SP11 - Static Electricity ✓ Flashcards
SP11a - Describe the movement of electrons and the charges involved when you rub an acetate rod with a cloth.
- Both objects start off as neutral.
- Electrons move from the acetate rod to the cloth so the acetate rod ends up positive and the cloth ends up negative.
SP11a - Describe the movement of electrons and the charges involved when you rub an polythene rod with a cloth.
- Both objects start off as neutral.
- Electrons move to the polythene rod from the cloth so the polythene rod ends up negative and the cloth ends up positive.
SP11a - Describe what will happen when you hang two rods next to each other with:
- Positive and positive charges
- Positive and negative charges
- Negative and negative charges
- Repel
- Attract
- Repel
SP11a - Explain how charging with induction works. (Use a balloon a jumper and a wall as an example)
- If you rub a balloon against a jumper, the friction causes electrons to transfer from the jumper to the balloon.
- The balloon now has a negative charge
- When brought close to a wall, the negative charge of the balloon repels the electrons in the wall
- The protons are brought closer to the surface of the wall as they are attracted to the balloons negative charge
- The balloon is attracted to the positive charge on the surface of the wall causing it to stick
- The wall has an induced charge
SP11b - How might you become charged while walking along a carpet?
Friction between your feet and the floor and slight friction between you and the air builds up charges.
SP11b - After gathering charge, how may you become discharged?
- By touching something made of conducting material, the electrons will jump to the object and head to the ground.
- You may experience a small electric shock
SP11b - Explain how lightning occurs.
- Static electricity builds up in clouds due to friction between ice and water particles in air currents.
- The negatively charged particle move towards the bottom of the cloud.
- As the ground is neutral, it is relatively positive to the cloud and so when the charge in the clouds is too great, they jump to the ground to discharge.
- This produces a spark which is lightning.
SP11b - How may a tall building protect an area from lightning.
- A tall building may install a lightning conductor.
- This would be a metal structure that would be the tallest structure in an area that runs through the centre of the building to the ground.
- This means that a cloud will discharge through this which wont affect the surrounding areas.
SP11b - Explain the safety feature that protects airline tankers and aircrafts.
- As high amounts of fuel pass through the nozzle at a fast rate, this build up friction which charges the fuel droplets.
- Once they have built up a great charge they want to discharge.
- This would create a spark which would light the fuel causing an explosion.
- The bonding line is attached which earths the aircraft so that the charge flows through easily to the ground without any spark.
SP11b - Why don’t cars need a bonding line at petrol stations.
The pipes and the car’s tyres earth the car already.
SP11b - Name some uses of static electricity.
- Electrostatic sprays:
- Spray paint
- Pesticide
- Printers
- Electrostatic precipitators
SP11b - How do electrostatic sprays work?
The nozzle contains electrodes which negatively charge the spray droplets. This leads to two things:
- The like charge between all droplets spread them out
- The negative charge attracts to the relatively positive object/crop and then charges it by induction to stick
SP11b - Name some advantages of electrostatic sprays
- Since they spread out there is wide coverage
- Since they attach through static induction there is even coverage
- Since all the droplets attach, less spray is wasted
SP11c - What is a force field, and what is an electrostatic field?
- A force field is the area around an object in which an object will experience a force and so…
- An electrostatic field is the area around an object where a charged object will experience a force
SP11c - What does a negative and a positive point charge diagram look like
- Both are a dot with equally spaced lines originating form the centre.
- In a positive one there are arrows away and in a negative one they are towards