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Electric Current

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Title: Electric Current


1
Chapter 24
  • Electric Current

2
Electric Current
  • The electric current I is the rate of flow of
    charge through some region of space
  • The SI unit of current is Ampere (A) 1 A 1 C/s
  • Let us look at the charges flowing
    perpendicularly to a surface of area A
  • The average current
  • The instanteneous current

3
Electric Current
  • The conventional direction of the current is the
    direction positive charge would flow
  • In a common conductor (e.g., copper), the current
    is due to the motion of the negatively charged
    electrons
  • It is common to refer to a moving charge as a
    mobile charge carrier
  • A charge carrier can be positive or negative

4
Current and Drift Speed
  • Charged particles move through a conductor of
    cross-sectional area A and a charge carrier
    density n
  • The total number of charge carriers n A ?x
  • The total charge is the number of carriers times
    the charge per carrier, q ?Q (n A ?x) q
  • The drift speed, vd, is the speed at which the
    carriers move vd ?x / ?t
  • ?Q (n A vd ?t) q
  • Iave ?Q / ?t n q vd A

5
Current and Drift Speed
  • If the conductor is isolated, the electrons
    undergo random motion (due to collisions with the
    atoms)
  • When an electric field is set up in the
    conductor, it creates an electric force on the
    electrons and hence a current
  • The zigzag line represents the motion of charge
    carrier in a conductor

6
Current and Drift Speed
  • The drift speed is much smaller than the average
    speed between collisions
  • When a circuit is completed, the electric field
    travels with a speed close to the speed of light
  • Therefore, although the drift speed is on the
    order of 10-4 m/s the effect of the electric
    field is felt on the order of 108 m/s

7
Current Density
  • The current density J of a conductor is defined
    as the current per unit area
  • If the current density is uniform and A is
    perpendicular to the direction of the current
    then this expression is valid J I / A nqvd
  • J has SI units of A/m2
  • The current density is in the direction of the
    positive charge carriers

8
Conductivity
  • A current density and an electric field are
    established in a conductor whenever a potential
    difference is maintained across the conductor
  • For some materials, the current density is
    directly proportional to the field
  • J s E
  • The coefficient of proportionality, s, is called
    the conductivity of the conductor

9
Ohms Law
  • Ohms law states that for many materials, the
    conductivity s is a constant that is independent
    of the electric field producing the current
  • Most metals obey Ohms law
  • Ohms law is not a fundamental law of nature, but
    an empirical relationship valid only for certain
    materials

10
Resistance
  • In a conductor, the voltage applied across the
    ends of the conductor is proportional to the
    current through the conductor
  • The constant of proportionality is the resistance
    of the conductor it arises due to collisions
    between the electrons carrying the current with
    the fixed atoms inside the conductor
  • SI unit of resistance is ohm (O) 1 O 1 V / A

11
Resistivity
  • The inverse of the conductivity is the
    resistivity of the material (see table 24.1)
  • ? 1 / s
  • Resistivity has SI units of ohm-meters (O . m)
  • The resistance of an ohmic conductor is
    proportional to its length, L, and inversely
    proportional to its cross-sectional area, A

12
Ohmic and Nonohmic Materials
  • Materials that obey Ohms Law are said to be
    ohmic (the relationship between current and
    voltage is linear, and the resistance is constant
    over a wide range of voltages)
  • Not all materials follow Ohms law
  • Materials that do not obey Ohms law are said to
    be nonohmic

13
Resistance and Resistivity, Summary
  • Every material has a characteristic resistivity
    that depends on the properties of the material
    and on temperature, i.e., resistivity is a
    property of substances
  • The resistance of a material depends on its
    geometry and its resistivity, i.e., resistance is
    a property of an object
  • An ideal conductor would have zero resistivity
  • An ideal insulator would have infinite resistivity

14
Chapter 24Problem 27
  • A uniform wire of resistance R is stretched until
    its length doubles. Assuming its density and
    resistivity remain constant, whats its new
    resistance?

15
A Model for Electrical Conduction
  • Treat a conductor as a regular array of atoms
    plus a collection of free electrons conduction
    electrons
  • In the absence of an electric field, the motion
    of the conduction electrons is random, and their
    speed is on the order of 106 m/s
  • When an electric field is applied, the conduction
    electrons are given a drift velocity

16
A Model for Electrical Conduction
  • We assume
  • 1) The electrons motion after a collision is
    independent of its motion before the collision
  • 2) The excess energy acquired by the electrons in
    the electric field is lost to the atoms of the
    conductor when the electrons and atoms collide
    (causing the temperature of the conductor to
    increase)

17
A Model for Electrical Conduction
  • The force experienced by an electron is
  • From Newtons Second Law, the acceleration is
  • Applying a motion equation
  • Since the initial velocities are random, their
    average value is zero
  • If t is the average time interval between
    successive collisions, then

18
A Model for Electrical Conduction
  • The current density
  • Using Ohms Law
  • The conductivity and the resistivity do not
    depend on the strength of the field
    (characteristic of a conductor obeying Ohms Law)

19
Temperature Variation of Resistivity
  • For most metals, resistivity increases with
    increasing temperature the atoms vibrate with
    increasing amplitude so the electrons find it
    more difficult to pass through the atoms
  • For most metals, resistivity increases
    approximately linearly with temperature over a
    limited temperature range
  • ?0 resistivity at some reference temperature T0
    (usually taken to be 20 C) a is the
    temperature coefficient of resistivity

20
Temperature Variation of Resistance
  • Since the resistance of a conductor with uniform
    cross sectional area is proportional to the
    resistivity, the effect of temperature on
    resistance is similar

21
Chapter 24Problem 59
  • The resistivity of copper as a function of
    temperature is given approximately by ? ?01
    a (T - T0), where ?0 is Table 24.1s entry for
    20C, T0 20C, and a 4.3 10-3 C-1. Find
    the temperature at which coppers resistivity is
    twice its room temperature value.

22
Residual Resistivity
  • For some metals, the resistivity is nearly
    proportional to the temperature
  • A nonlinear region always exists at very low
    temperatures, and the resistivity usually reaches
    some finite value as the temperature approaches
    absolute zero
  • The residual resistivity near 0 K is caused
    primarily by the collisions of electrons with
    impurities and imperfections in the metal

23
Superconductors
  • Superconductors a class of materials whose
    resistances fall to virtually zero below a
    certain temperature, TC (critical temperature)
  • The value of TC is sensitive to chemical
    composition, pressure, and crystalline structure
  • Once a current is set up in a superconductor, it
    persists without any applied voltage (since R
    0)
  • One application is superconducting magnets

24
Semiconductors
  • Semiconductors are materials that exhibit a
    decrease in resistivity with an increase in
    temperature, i.e. a is negative
  • The reason an increase in the density of charge
    carriers at higher temperatures

25
Electrical Energy and Power
  • In a circuit, as a charge moves through the
    battery, the electrical potential energy of the
    system is increased by ?Q ?V (the chemical
    potential energy of the battery decreases by the
    same amount)
  • The charge moving through a resistor loses this
    potential energy during collisions with atoms in
    the resistor (the temperature of the resistor
    increases)
  • When the charge returns to a, the net result is
    that some chemical energy of the battery has been
    delivered to the resistor and caused its
    temperature to rise

26
Electrical Energy and Power
  • The rate at which the energy is lost is the power
  • From Ohms Law, alternate forms of power are
  • The SI unit of power is Watt (W) (I must be in
    Amperes, R in ohms and ?V in Volts)
  • The unit of energy used by electric companies is
    the kilowatt-hour (defined in terms of the unit
    of power and the amount of time it is supplied)
    1 kWh 3.60 x 106 J

27
Chapter 24Problem 29
  • A 4.5-W flashlight bulb draws 750 mA. (a) At what
    voltage does it operate? (b) Whats its
    resistance?

28
Answers to Even Numbered Problems Chapter 24
Problem 14 2.9 105 C
29
Answers to Even Numbered Problems Chapter 24
Problem 28 1.4 kW
30
Answers to Even Numbered Problems Chapter 24
Problem 52 840 km
31
  • Answers to Even Numbered Problems
  • Chapter 24
  • Problem 54
  • 8.70 kA
  • 15.1
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