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Electric Potential Difference

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Electric Potential Difference Physics A Current #1 Once at the high potential terminal, a positive test charge will then move through the external circuit and do work ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electric Potential Difference


1
Electric Potential Difference
  • Physics A
  • Current 1

2
Work Potential Energy
  • Work is done on an object when a force is exerted
    to move the object some distance.
  • Work must be done on an object to move it in a
    direction that it would not naturally go.
  • For example, you must do on a rock to lift it
    against the force of gravity.
  • When you do work on the rock, energy is
    transferred from you to the rock.
  • You lose energy. The rock gains the same
    amount of energy.
  • The energy gained by the rock is potential (or
    stored) energy.

3
Work Potential Energy
  • Gravity can also do work on the rock when it
    falls to the Earth.
  • Objects naturally move from high potential energy
    to low potential energy under the influence of
    the field force.

4
Electric Field, Work Potential Energy
  • To move a charge in an electric field against its
    natural direction of motion would require work.
  • The exertion of work by an external force would
    in turn add potential energy to the object.

5
Electric Potential
  • Electric potential is the potential energy per
    charge.
  • This means that electric potential DOES NOT
    depend on the test charge.

6
Electric Potential in Circuits
  • A battery powered electric circuit has locations
    of high and low potential.
  • Charge moving through the wires of the circuit
    will encounter changes in electric potential as
    it traverses the circuit.
  • Within the electrochemical cells of the battery,
    there is an electric field established between
    the two terminals, directed from the positive
    terminal towards the negative terminal.

7
Electric Potential in Circuits
  • The movement of a positive test charge through
    the cells from the negative terminal to the
    positive terminal would require work, thus
    increasing the potential energy of every Coulomb
    of charge that moves along this path.
  • This corresponds to a movement of positive charge
    against the electric field.
  • It is for this reason that the positive terminal
    is described as the high potential terminal.

8
Electric Potential in Circuits
  • Which way would a positive charge naturally move
    through a circuit?
  • Negative terminal to positive terminal?
  • Positive terminal to negative terminal?
  • Conventional (traditional) currents are based on
    the flow of positive charges.
  • Which way does conventional current flow?

9
  • In a certain sense, an electric circuit is
    nothing more than an energy conversion system.
  • In the electrochemical cells of a battery-powered
    electric circuit, the chemical energy is used to
    do work on a positive test charge to move it from
    the low potential terminal to the high potential
    terminal.
  • Chemical energy is transformed into electric
    potential energy within the internal circuit
    (i.e., the battery).

10
  • Once at the high potential terminal, a positive
    test charge will then move through the external
    circuit and do work upon the light bulb or the
    motor or the heater coils, transforming its
    electric potential energy into useful forms for
    which the circuit was designed.
  • The positive test charge returns to the
    negative
  • terminal at a low energy and low potential,
  • ready to repeat the cycle all over again.

11
  • The quantity of electric potential is defined as
    the amount of ______.
  • electric potential energy
  • force acting upon a charge
  • potential energy per charge
  • force per charge

12
  • Complete the following statement
  • When work is done on a positive test charge by an
    external force to move it from one location to
    another, potential energy _________ (increases,
    decreases) and electric potential _________
    (increases, decreases).

13
Electric Potential Difference
  • Consider the task of moving a positive
  • test charge within a uniform electric
  • field from location A to location B as
  • shown in the diagram at the right.
  • In moving the charge against the electric field
    from location A to location B, work will have to
    be done on the charge by an external force.

14
  • The work done on the charge changes its potential
    energy to a higher value and the amount of work
    that is done is equal to the change in the
    potential energy.
  • As a result of this change in potential energy,
    there is also a difference in electric potential
    between locations A and B.
  • This difference in electric potential is
    represented by the symbol ?V and is formally
    referred to as the electric potential difference.

15
Electric Potential Difference
  • By definition, the electric potential difference
  • is the difference in electric potential (V)
  • between the final and the initial location
  • when work is done upon a charge to change
  • its potential energy.
  • In equation form, the electric potential
    difference is
  • The standard metric unit on electric potential
    difference is the volt, abbreviated V.
  • One Volt is equivalent to one Joule per Coulomb.
  • Because electric potential difference is
    expressed in units of volts, it is sometimes
    referred to as the voltage.

16
Voltage Simple Circuits
  • Electric circuits are all about the movement of
    charge between varying locations and the
    corresponding loss and gain of energy that
    accompanies this movement.
  • As the positive test charge moves through the
    external circuit from the positive terminal to
    the negative terminal, it decreases its electric
    potential energy and
  • thus is at low potential by
  • the time it returns to the
  • negative terminal.

17
Voltage Simple Circuits
  • If a 12 volt battery is used in the circuit, then
    every coulomb of charge is gaining 12 joules of
    potential energy as it moves through the battery.
  • And similarly, every coulomb of charge loses 12
    joules of electric potential energy as it passes
    through the external circuit.
  • The loss of this electric potential
  • energy in the external circuit
  • results in a gain in light energy,
  • thermal energy and other forms
  • of non-electrical energy.

18
Voltage Simple Circuits
  • Electrochemical cells supply the energy to do
    work upon the charge to move it from the negative
    terminal to the positive terminal.
  • By providing energy to the charge, the cell is
    capable of maintaining an electric potential
    difference across the two ends of the external
    circuit.
  • Once the charge has reached the high potential
    terminal, it will naturally flow through the
    wires to the low potential terminal.

19
Voltage Simple Circuits
  • The movement of charge through an electric
    circuit is analogous to the movement of water at
    a water park or the movement of roller coaster
    cars at an amusement park.
  • In your notes, explain one of these analogies or
    create one of your own.

20
Voltage Simple Circuits
  • The internal circuit is the part of the circuit
    where energy is being supplied to the charge.
  • The movement of charge through the internal
    circuit requires energy since it is in a
    direction that is against the electric field.
  • The external circuit is the part of the circuit
    where charge is moving outside the cells through
    the wires on its path from the high potential
    terminal to the low potential terminal.
  • The movement of charge
  • through the external circuit is
  • natural since it is a movement
  • in the direction of the
  • electric field.

21
Voltage Simple Circuits
  • As a positive test charge moves through the
    external circuit, it encounters a variety of
    types of circuit elements. Each circuit element
    serves as an energy-transforming device. Light
    bulbs, motors, and heating elements (such as in
    toasters and hair dryers) are examples of
    energy-transforming devices. In each of these
    devices, the electrical potential energy of the
    charge is transformed into other useful (and
    non-useful) forms. For instance, in a light bulb,
    the electric potential energy of the charge is
    transformed into light energy (a useful form) and
    thermal energy (a non-useful form). The moving
    charge is doing work upon the light bulb to
    produce two different forms of energy. By doing
    so, the moving charge is losing its electric
    potential energy.

22
Upon leaving the circuit element, the charge is
less energized. The location just prior to
entering the light bulb (or any circuit element)
is a high electric potential location and the
location just after leaving the light bulb (or
any circuit element) is a low electric potential
location. Referring to the diagram above,
locations A and B are high potential locations
and locations C and D are low potential
locations. The loss in electric potential while
passing through a circuit element is often
referred to as a voltage drop. By the time that
the positive test charge has returned to the
negative terminal, it is at 0 volts and is ready
to be re-energized and pumped back up to the high
voltage, positive terminal.
23
  • Moving an electron within an electric field would
    change the ____ the electron.
  • mass of
  • amount of charge on
  • potential energy of  

24
  • If an electrical circuit were analogous to a
    water circuit at a water park, then the battery
    voltage would be comparable to _____.
  • the rate at which water flows through the circuit
  • the speed at which water flows through the
    circuit
  • the distance that water flows through the circuit
  • the water pressure between the top and bottom of
    the circuit
  • the hindrance caused by obstacles in the path of
    the moving water

25
  • If the electrical circuit in your iPod were
    analogous to a water circuit at a water park,
    then the battery would be comparable to _____.
  • the people that slide from the elevated positions
    to the ground
  • the obstacles that stand in the path of the
    moving water
  • the pump that moves water from the ground to the
    elevated positions
  • the pipes through which water flows
  • the distance that water flows through the circuit

26
  • Which of the following is true about the
    electrical circuit in your flashlight?
  • Charge moves around the circuit very fast -
    nearly as fast as the speed of light.
  • The battery supplies the charge (electrons) that
    moves through the wires.
  • The battery supplies the charge (protons) that
    moves through the wires.
  • The charge becomes used up as it passes through
    the light bulb.
  • The battery supplies energy that raises charge
    from low to high voltage.
  • ... nonsense! None of these are true.

27
  • If a battery provides a high voltage, it can __.
  • do a lot of work over the course of its lifetime
  • do a lot of work on each charge it encounters
  • push a lot of charge through a circuit
  • last a long time

28
  • Compared to point D, point A is _____ electric
    potential.
  • 12 V higher in
  • 12 V lower in
  • exactly the same
  • ... impossible to tell

29
  • The electric potential energy of a charge is zero
    at point _____.

30
  • Energy is required to force a positive test
    charge to move ___.
  1. through the wire from point A to point B
  2. through the light bulb from point B to point C
  3. through the wire from point C to point D
  4. through the battery from point D to point A

31
  • The energy required to move 2 C of charge
    between points D and A is ____ J.
  • 0.167
  • 2.0
  • 6.0
  • 12
  • 24

32
  • The following circuit consists of a D-cell and a
    light bulb. Use gt, lt, and symbols to compare
    the electric potential at A to B and at C to D.
    Indicate whether the devices add energy to or
    remove energy from the charge.
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