electricity

Cards (69)

  • build up of static is caused by friction
  • when certain insulating materials rub against each other, negative electrons will be scraped of one and put onto another
  • electrons will go from the cloth to the polyethene rod
  • only electrons move in static electricity, the loss of electrons causes a positive charge
  • As electric charge builds up, the voltage between the object and the earth increases. If the voltage gets large enough, electrons can jump across to the earth and cause a spark.
  • voltage is the force which drives the flow of electrons and is provided by the cell
  • resistance is everything which opposes the flow of electrons and is measured in ohms
  • when resistance stays constant, when voltage increases, current increases proportionally
  • filament lamp
  • a diode
  • resistor, the negative part is when the battery is attached the opposite way
  • diodes only allow a current to flow in one direction they create a very high resistance in the opposite direction
  • charge is the measure of total current that flowed within a certain period of time and is measured in coulombs
  • in series circuits voltage is shared across all compnments. VT=V1+V2+V3
  • in series circuits, current is the same throughout and is measured with an ammeter which can be placed anywhere
  • in series circuits, the total resistance is equal to the individual resistance of each component
  • in series circuits, a voltmeter must be placed parallel at the component
  • in parallel circuits there is usually only one component on each loop. each component will get full voltage (the same as the total voltage)
  • in parallel circuits, the current is shared but doesnt have to be equal across all components
  • in parallel circuits, loops with greater resistance will have a lower current and more components equals a lower total resistance
  • open switch
  • closed switch
  • filament lamp
  • fuse that breaks if there is too much current (saftey)
  • diode which only allows current to flow in one direction
  • LED (light emitting diode) emits light when current flows in one direction
  • ammeter measures current and must be placed in series
  • voltmeter measures voltage and must be placed in parallel
  • resistor restricts the flow of electrons
  • variable resistor allows the resistance to be modified
  • LDR (light depending resistor) makes the resistance dependent on the light intensity, the higher the light intensity, the lower the resistance making the current higher
  • thermistor makes the resistance dependent on temperature, the higher the temperature, the lower the resistance making the current higher
  • PowerStations on the national grid generate thermal energy and convert it into electrical energy
  • a high current produces lots of thermal energy due to resistance which wastes lots of energy
  • step up transformers lower the current and increase the voltage to reduce wasted energy
  • step up transformers have more coils on the secondary coil
  • step down transformers then lower the voltage back down to 230v for houses
  • high voltage is dangerous and can blow appliances up
  • alternating current flows in both directions due to an alternating potential difference
  • all mains supply is alternating current and is 230v and 50 Hz