13.3 Electromotive force and internal resistance Flashcards

1
Q

What is the internal resistance of a source of electricity due to

A

Opposition to the flow of charge through the source.

Causes electrical energy produced by the source to be dissipated inside the source when charge flows through

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2
Q

What is the electromotive force

A

The electrical energy per unit charge produced by the source.

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3
Q

If electrical energy E is given to a charge Q in the source:

A

ε = E/Q

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4
Q

What is the pd across the terminals of the source

A

The electrical energy per unit charge delivered by the source when it is in a circuit
Less than the emf whenever current passes through the source.

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5
Q

What is the difference between the pd across the terminals of a source and the emf caused by?

A

Caused by the internal resistance of the source

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6
Q

The internal resistance of a source is…

A

…the loss of potential difference per unit current in the source when current passes through the source

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7
Q

The cell emf ε =

A

IR + Ir

In which:
I = Current
r = Internal resistance
R = External resistance

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8
Q

What is the lost pd inside the cell equal to…

A

…the difference between the cell emf and the pd across its terminals.

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9
Q

What is the lost pd in energy terms

A

The energy per coulomb dissipated or wasted inside the cell due to its internal resistance

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10
Q

Power supplied by the cell, Iε =

A

I^2R + I^2r

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11
Q

The power supplied by the cell is equal to…

A

…the power delivered to R+ the power wasted in the cell due to its internal resistance

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12
Q

The power delivered to R =

A

I^2R = (ε^2/(R+r)^2) x R

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13
Q

When a source delivers ______ to a load, maximum power is delivered to the load when the load resistance is equal to the ______ ______ of the source.

A

Power

Internal resistance

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14
Q

How can the pd across the terminals of a cell be measured by

A

Connecting a high-resistance voltmeter directly across the terminals of the cell

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15
Q

How can the current in a circuit be changed

A

By adjusting the variable resistor

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16
Q

How does the terminal pd change as current increases

A

It decreases

17
Q

Why does the terminal pd decrease as current increases

A

The terminal pd is equal to the cell emf at zero current. This is because the lost pd is zero at zero current

The graph is a straight line with a negative gradient.

18
Q

Rearranging ε=IR+Ir to become…

A

… V=ε-Ir

Shows that the graph of terminal pd and current is a negative straight line

19
Q

For current I1, the terminal pd V1=

A

ε-I1r

20
Q

For current I2, the terminal pd V2=

A

ε-I2r

21
Q

How can r be calculated

A

r = V1-V2/I2-I1