Chapter 14: Current of Electricity Flashcards

1
Q

Define current

A

It is the rate of flow of charged particles with respect to time (I = dQ/dt)

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2
Q

Define drift velocity

A

It is the average velocity of charge carriers along the conductor

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3
Q

Define charge

A

The amount of charge that flows past a point in a point in time is the product of current and time, if the current is steady

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4
Q

State the conservation of charge

A

The amount of charge entering and leaving each junction is conserved, and charges cannot be created or destroyed (Current remains constant along on single conductor)

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5
Q

Define potential difference

A

It is the electrical energy converted to other forms of energy per unit charge passing through the device

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6
Q

Define emf

A

It is the amount of electrical energy converted from other forms of energy per unit charge, transferred by a source in driving one unit charge around one complete circuit

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7
Q

Define resistance

A

The ratio of potential difference across a conductor to the current flowing through it

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8
Q

State Ohm’s Law

A

It states that the current flowing through a metallic conductor is proportional to the potential difference across its ends, under constant physical conditions

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9
Q

Define resistivity

A

A measure of how strongly a material opposes electric current and characterises the material’s resistance at a fixed temperature regardless of the material’s dimension

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10
Q

What is the formula of the terminal pd across a battery with internal resistance?

A

V = ɛ - Ir

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11
Q

What is the maximum power-transfer theorem?

A

Power transfer is maximum when R = r

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12
Q

Explain both reverse and forward bias

Explain the shape of the I-V graph of an ideal semiconductor diode

A
  • In the forward bias direction, the graph is an exponential curve beyond the threshold point shortly after the origin, and the diode’s resistance is insignificant since I increases exponentially with V
  • In the reverse bias direction, the graph is a horizontal line from the origin followed by a near-vertical line. Since I is insignificant before the breakdown voltage, the diode’s resistance is very high
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13
Q

Explain the shape of the I-V graph of a negative temperature coefficient (NTC) thermistor

A
  • When temperature increases, more charge carriers are liberated and become mobile, increasing conductivity
  • The amplitude of vibration of lattice ions increase, causing more frequent collision between charge carriers and lattice ions, reducing the mean drift speed of charge carriers and decreasing conductivity
  • The effect of increasing mobile charge carriers is greater than the effect of more frequent collisions, causing an overall rise in conductivity and a fall in resistance
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14
Q

Explain the shape of the I-V graph of an ohmic conductor

A
  • As the pd across the ohmic conductor increases, the temperature of the conductor remains constant, meaning the mobility of charge carriers remains constant (reliant on temperature).
  • This shows that the resistance of an ohmic conductor remains constant
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15
Q

Explain the shape of the I-V graph of a filament lamp

A
  • As the pd across the lamp increases from zero, the current increases and the energy dissipated as heat increases, resulting in a higher temperature
  • An increase in temperature of the filament lamp will cause the amplitude of lattice ion’s vibration to increase, increasing the frequency of collision between the lattice ions and conducting electrons
  • This decreases the mean drift speed of the electrons as they become less mobile, causing resistance to increase
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