DOC PREVIEW
UNC-Chapel Hill PHYS 104 - ch26

This preview shows page 1-2-23-24 out of 24 pages.

Save
View full document
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 24 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 24 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 24 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
View full document
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 24 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience
Premium Document
Do you want full access? Go Premium and unlock all 24 pages.
Access to all documents
Download any document
Ad free experience

Unformatted text preview:

Chapter 26PowerPoint PresentationSlide 3Slide 4Slide 5Slide 6Slide 7Slide 8Slide 9Slide 10Slide 11Slide 12Slide 13Slide 14Slide 15Slide 16Slide 17Slide 18Slide 19Slide 20Slide 21Slide 22Slide 23Slide 24Chapter 26Current and Resistance26.2: Electric Current:Although an electric current is a stream of moving charges, not all movingcharges constitute an electric current. If there is to be an electric current througha given surface, there must be a net flow of charge through that surface. Twoexamples are given.1. The free electrons (conduction electrons) in an isolated length of copper wire are in random motion at speeds of the order of 106 m/s. If you pass a hypothetical plane through such a wire, conduction electrons pass through it in both directions at the rate of many billions per second—but there is no net transport of charge and thus no current through the wire. However, if you connect the ends of the wire to a battery, you slightly bias the flow in one direction, with the result that there now is a net transport of charge and thus an electric current through the wire.2. The flow of water through a garden hose represents the directed flow of positivecharge (the protons in the water molecules) at a rate of perhaps several million coulombs per second. There is no net transport of charge, because there is a parallel flow of negative charge (the electrons in the water molecules) of exactly the same amount moving in exactly the same direction.26.2: Electric Current:The figure shows a section of a conductor, part of a conducting loop in which current has been established. If charge dq passes through a hypothetical plane (such as aa’) in time dt, then the current i through that plane is defined as:The charge that passes through the plane in a time interval extending from 0 to t is:Under steady-state conditions, the current is the same for planes aa’, bb’, and cc’ and for all planes that pass completely through the conductor, no matter what their location or orientation.The SI unit for current is the coulomb per second, or the ampere (A):26.2: Electric Current:26.2: Electric Current, Conservation of Charge, and Direction of Current:Example, Current is the Rate at which charge passes through a point:26.3: Current Density:The magnitude of current density, J, is equal to the current per unit area through any element of cross section. It has the same direction as the velocity of the moving charges if they are positive and the opposite direction if they are negative.If the current is uniform across the surface and parallel to dA, then J is also uniformand parallel to dA.Here, A is the total area of the surface. The SI unit for current density is the ampere per square meter (A/m2).26.3: Current Density:Figure 26-4 shows how current density can be represented with a similar set of lines, which we can call streamlines. The current, which is toward the right, makes a transition from the wider conductor at the left to the narrower conductor at the right. Since charge is conserved during the transition, the amount of charge and thus the amount of current cannot change. However, the current density changes—it is greater in the narrower conductor.26.3: Current Density, Drift Speed:When a conductor has a current passing through it, the electrons move randomly, but they tend to drift with a drift speed vd in the direction opposite that of the applied electric field that causes the current. The drift speed is tiny compared with the speeds in the random motion.In the figure, the equivalent drift of positive charge carriers is in the direction of the applied electric field, E. If we assume that these charge carriers all move with the same drift speed vd and that the current density J is uniform across the wire’s cross-sectional area A, then the number of charge carriers in a length L of the wire is nAL. Here n is the number of carriers per unit volume. The total charge of the carriers in the length L, each with charge e, is thenThe total charge moves through any cross section of the wire in the time intervalExample, Current Density, Uniform and Nonuniform:Example, Current Density, Uniform and Nonuniform, cont.:Example, In a current, the conduction electrons move very slowly.:26.4: Resistance and Resistivity:We determine the resistance between any two points of a conductor by applying a potential difference V between those points and measuring the current i that results. The resistance R is thenThe SI unit for resistance that follows from Eq. 26-8 is the volt per ampere. This has a special name, the ohm (symbol ):In a circuit diagram, we represent a resistor and a resistance with the symbol .26.4: Resistance and Resistivity:The resistivity, , of a resistor is defined as:The SI unit for  is .m. The conductivity  of a material is the reciprocal of its resistivity:26.4: Resistance and Resistivity, Calculating Resistance from Resistivity:If the streamlines representing the current density are uniform throughout the wire, the electric field, E, and the current density, J, will be constant for all points within the wire.26.4: Resistance and Resistivity, Variation with Temperature:The relation between temperature and resistivity for copper—and for metals in general—is fairly linear over a rather broad temperature range. For such linear relations we can write an empirical approximation that is good enough for most engineering purposes:Example, A material has resistivity, a block of the material has a resistance.:26.5: Ohm’s Law:26.6: A Macroscopic View of Ohm’s Law:It is often assumed that the conduction electrons in a metal move with a single effective speed veff, and this speed is essentially independent of the temperature. For copper, veff =1.6 x106m/s.When we apply an electric field to a metal sample, the electrons modify their random motions slightly and drift very slowly—in a direction opposite that of the field—with an average drift speed vd. The drift speed in a typical metallic conductor is about 5 x10-7 m/s, less than the effective speed (1.6 x106 m/s) by many orders of magnitude.The motion of conduction electrons in an electric field is a combination of the motion due to random collisions and that due to E.If an electron of mass m is placed in an electric field of magnitude E, the electron will experience an acceleration:In the average time  between collisions, the average electron will acquire a drift speed of vd =a.Example, Mean Free Time and Mean


View Full Document

UNC-Chapel Hill PHYS 104 - ch26

Documents in this Course
ch27

ch27

19 pages

ch28

ch28

20 pages

ch29

ch29

14 pages

Load more
Download ch26
Our administrator received your request to download this document. We will send you the file to your email shortly.
Loading Unlocking...
Login

Join to view ch26 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or
We will never post anything without your permission.
Don't have an account?
Sign Up

Join to view ch26 2 2 and access 3M+ class-specific study document.

or

By creating an account you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms Of Use

Already a member?