CH 26 J Current Density and Drift Velocity Current and Resistance

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Phy 213: General Physics III Chapter 26: Electric Current Lecture Notes.
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CH 26 J Current Density and Drift Velocity Current and Resistance Perfect conductors carry charge instantaneously from here to there Perfect insulators carry no charge from here to there, ever Real substances always have some density n of charges q that can move, however slowly Usually electrons When you turn on an electric field, the charges start to move with average velocity vd Called the drift velocity J Why did I draw J to the right? There is a current density J associated with this motion of charges Current density represents a flow of charge Note: J tends to be in the direction of E, even when vd isn’t

Current Density Assume in each of the figures below, the number of charges drawn represents the actual density of charges moving, and the arrows represent equal drift velocities for any moving charges. In which case is there the greatest current density going to the left? A B - - - + + + + - - - + + - - + + + + - - C D - - - + + - + + - + - - + - + + + + - -

Quick Quiz 26.1 JIT Consider positive and negative charges of equal magnitude moving horizontally through the four regions shown in the figure. Rank the current in these four regions from highest to lowest. (a) > (b) = (c) > (d)

Ohm’s Law: Microscopic Version In general, the stronger the electric field, the faster the charge carriers drift The relationship is often proportional Ohm’s Law says that it is proportional Ohm’s Law doesn’t always apply The proportionality constant, denoted , is called the resistivity It has nothing to do with charge density, even though it has the same symbol It depends (strongly) on the substance used and (weakly) on the temperature Resistivities vary over many orders of magnitude Silver:  = 1.5910-8 m, a nearly perfect conductor Fused Quartz:  = 7.51017 m, a nearly perfect insulator Silicon:  = 640 m, a semi-conductor Ignore units for now

Current It is rare we are interested in the microscopic current density We want to know about the total flow of charge through some object J The total amount of charge flowing out of an object per unit time is called the current What are the units of I? The ampere or amp (A) is 1 C/s Current represents a change in charge Almost always, this charge is being replaced somehow, so there is no accumulation of charge anywhere

Solve on Board

Warmup 10

Ohm’s Law for Resistors Suppose we have a cylinder of material with conducting endcaps Length L, cross-sectional area A The material will be assumed to follow Ohm’s Microscopic Law L Apply a voltage V across it Define the resistance as Then we have Ohm’s Law for devices Just like microscopic Ohm’s Law, doesn’t always work Resistance depends on composition, temperature and geometry We can control it by manufacture Resistance has units of Volts/Amps Also called an Ohm () An Ohm isn’t much resistance Circuit diagram for resistor

Warmup 10

Quick Quiz 26.3 JIT In the figure, as the applied voltage increases, does the resistance of the diode increase, decrease, or remain the same? b

Ohm’s Law and Temperature Resistivity depends on composition and temperature If you look up the resistivity  for a substance, it would have to give it at some reference temperature T0 Normally 20C For temperatures not too far from 20 C, we can hope that resistivity will be approximately linear in temperature Look up 0 and in tables For devices, it follows there will also be temperature dependence The constants  and T0 will be the same for the device for tungsten, 0.0045 1/K a for carbon, -0.005 1/K

This is basically Quick Quiz 26.4. Ans immediately (R lower). Warmup10b This is basically Quick Quiz 26.4. Ans immediately (R lower). V = IR. R increases as it heats up, I decreases.

Sample Problem Platinum has a temperature coefficient of = 0.00392/C. A wire at T = T0 = 20.0C has a resistance of R = 100.0 . What is the temperature if the resistance changes to 103.9 ? A) 0C B) 10C C) 20C D) 30C E) 40C F) None of the above

Warmup10b

Non-Ohmic Devices Some of the most interesting devices do not follow Ohm’s Law Diodes are devices that let current through one way much more easily than the other way Superconductors are cold materials that have no resistance at all They can carry current forever with no electric field

Power and Resistors The charges flowing through a resistor are having their potential energy changed Q Where is the energy going? The charge carriers are bumping against atoms They heat the resistor up V

Ans B Ans A

Sample Problem P = 100 W Two “resistors” are connected to the same 120 V circuit, but consume different amounts of power. Which one has the larger resistance, and how much larger? A) The 50 W has twice the resistance B) The 50 W has four times the resistance C) The 100 W has twice the resistance D) The 100 W has four times the resistance P = 50 W V = 120 V The potential difference is the same across them both The lower resistance one has more power The one with twice the power has half the resistance

Warmup10b transformers and high voltage Copper wires high R, Choose IV rather than I^2R, low current, high voltage. 7.5 kV

Uses for resistors You can make heating devices using resistors Toasters, incandescent light bulbs, fuses You can measure temperature by measuring changes in resistance Resistance-temperature devices Resistors are used whenever you want a linear relationship between potential and current They are cheap They are useful They appear in virtually every electronic circuit