electricity 2 Flashcards

(82 cards)

1
Q

what is a circuit?

A

something with a closed loop, something for electrons to flow through and a power source

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2
Q

what is current and what’s it measured in?

A

rate of flow of charged electrons around the circuit
amps (A)

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3
Q

what’s force and what’s it measured in?

A

the force driving the flow of electrons
voltage
volts (V)

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4
Q

what’s resistance and what is it measured in?

A

everything that resists or opposes the flow of electrons
ohms (Ω)

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5
Q

which way does a circuit current flow?

A

positive to negative

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6
Q

which line of a cells are negative and positive?

A

small line - negative
large line - positive

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7
Q

what is the equation linking voltage, current and resistance?

A

voltage = current x resistance

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8
Q

what causes resistance to increase?

A

a high temperature

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9
Q

what’s a diode?

A

only allows current to flow in one direction
done by using a very high resistance stopping flow from going in other direction

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10
Q

what controls the flow of electricity?

A

a switch

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11
Q

what’s a fuse?

A

breaks if too much current

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12
Q

what’s the diode that emits light when current flows through in a forward direction?

A

light emitting diode

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13
Q

what do ammeters measure?

A

measure current

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14
Q

where are ammeters placed?

A

connected in series

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15
Q

what do voltmeters measure?

A

measure voltage

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16
Q

where are voltmeters placed?

A

added in parallel

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17
Q

what are the four types of resistors?

A

variable resistors (modify the amount of resistance)
fixed resistors
light dependant resistors
thermistors

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18
Q

what’s a light dependant resistor?

A

resistor that depends on light intensity
- in light there is low resistance so lots of current can flow
- in dark there is high resistance so no current can flow

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19
Q

what are some examples of light dependant resistors?

A

automatic night lights
burglar alarms

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20
Q

what’s thermistors?

A

dependant on temperature
- higher temperatures cause resistance to fall
- low temperatures cause resistance increase

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21
Q

what’s some uses of thermistors?

A

car engines
electric thermostats

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22
Q

what’s charge?

A

charge is a measure of the total current that flowed within a certain period of time

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23
Q

what is charge measured in?

A

coulombs (C)

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24
Q

what’s the equation for charge?

A

charge = current x time

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25
does current vary within a series circuit?
no there is the same current everywhere
26
why is an ammeter placed in series?
as the currents is the same everywhere in a series circuit
27
how do you calculate the voltage of a single component?
using a voltmeter in parallel to component
28
what’s a series circuit?
a circuit with one loop
29
what’s a parallel circuit?
a circuit with more than one loop
30
what’s the equation to work out energy?
energy transferred = voltage x current x time
31
how do you work out power?
power = current x voltage
32
what unit in energy measured in?
joules (J)
33
what is a surge?
sudden increase in current
34
what can a surge cause?
a damage in the appliance fires electric shocks
35
what is a fuse and what’s its purpose?
breaks the circuit when the current gets too high thin wire in the live wire that heats up and melts breaking the circuit so no more current can flow simple and cheap permanently broken after a surge
36
what’s a circuit breaker and what’s its purpose?
breaks the circuit when there is a surge don’t get permanently damaged circuit breaks > trip > turn off circuit > can be reset more expensive than fuses
37
how can you reduce the harm of surges and live wires?
via earthing -earth wire (an alternative pathway) -any electricity is diverted through the earth wire double insulate - plastic doesn’t conduct electricity so we can’t get an electric shock
38
what is static electricity?
build up of charge on insulating materials
39
can static electricity charge build up on conducting materials?
no as electrons will just transfer back to another
40
can static charge build-up on insulating materials?
yes as electrons can't flow back
41
when rubbing a cloth and polythene rod together what charges are on both objects?
polythene - negative cloth - positive
42
when rubbing a cloth and acetate rod together what charges are on both objects?
acetate rod - positive cloth - negative
43
with static electricity, what is the only thing that can be transferred?
electrons
44
what happens to a balloon when you charge it with friction?
balloon - negative if you hold ballon to wall electrons are repelled and the balloon is attracted to the positively charged surface of the wall
45
dangers of electric charge refuelling:
aircrafts become electrostatically charged during flight (air rubbing against aircraft) charge can spark to ground or to fuel nozzle this is very dangerous as it could be near any flammable fuel resulting in an explosion solution - earth aircraft so charge is discharged to the earth no build up of charge no risk of spark
46
dangers of electric charge lightning:
rising air causes air particles to rub against each other when change build-up is big enough it will discharge between earth and cloud making a lightning bolt that can cause fires solution - connect a lightning rod that is earthed reducing risk of fire
47
uses of electric charge paint spraying:
nossle has positive charge object has negative charge positive droplets repel each other and spread out advantage - even coat of paint droplets are attracted to object no paint wasted paint sticks to call sides
48
uses of electric charge soot removal:
gas particles are negatively charged negatively charged particles are attracted to the positively charged metal plate waste gases without particles continue up chimney metal plates are knocked remove build-up of soot
49
uses of electric charge inkjet printer:
ink is negatively charged as it passes through a charger if top plate is negatively charged the negatively charged ink droplets repel downwards
50
what's the structure of metals?
layers of metal ions which are surrounded by delocalised electrons
51
what's the hazard of a frayed cable?
plastic insulation is no longer intact causing risk of electric shock in a short circuit it could cause heating and risk of fire
52
what's the risk of long cables?
have larger resistance so wire will heat up and cause a fire
53
what's the hazard of damaged plugs?
plastic insulation is missing or broken leaving live wires exposed creating a risk of an electric shock
54
what's the hazard water around socket?
water can get into electrical equipment allowing for electricity to conduct to the outside causing an electric shock
55
what's the hazard of pushing metal into sockets?
metal is a very good conductor creating risk of electric shock
56
what is the material and purpose of plug casing?
plastic - hard insulator so current cannot pass through so no risk of electric shock
57
what's the material and purpose of wire covering?
plastic - soft insulator so current cannot pass through so no risk of electric shock, wires cannot short circuit if encased in same cable
58
what's the material and use of prongs?
bass good conductor so current can easily pass-through not malleable so will not bend or break
59
what are wires made out of and why?
copper very good conductor and cheap ductile meaning it can be drawn into wires
60
what colour is the live wire, what's its charge and its placement in the plug?
brown right alternates between +230V to -230V of a.c current
61
what colour is the neutral wire, what's its charge and its placement in the plug?
blue left always at 0V to complete the circuit
62
what colour is the earth wire, what's its charge and its placement in the plug?
green and yellow middle to the metal casing there to keep users safe from electric shocks
63
how do the earth wire and fuse work together?
earth normally doesn't have current flowing through it earth wire connected to metal casing of appliance if live wire touches the metal a big current flows through the live wire and into earth wire which will blow and melt the fuse cutting off live supply
64
what is dc (direct current)?
when current travels in one direction only battery supply portable and low voltage needs replacing and recharging positive to negative
65
what is ac (alternating current)?
when current changes direction continuously not portable main supply high voltage 230V doesn't need replacing
66
why do wires heat up?
wire heats up as the electrons move through wire and collide with the metal ions are vibrating, free electrons will collide with the metal ions transferring energy to the ions in a form of heat increasing their kinetic energy
67
what’s a conductor?
something that allows the flow of current
68
what are good conductors?
all metals , some are better than others for example : copper is chosen for household wiring as it is relatively cheap and ductile so can be drawn into wires aluminium gold silver
69
what are some common examples of insulators?
wood, plastic, glass, air, rubber
70
what's the important thing about the casing of the plug?
if casing is not earthed than the appliances casing will be live and LETHAL
71
what is double insulation?
anything with double insulation just needs a live wire and a neutral wire, no earth wire need
72
how do you work out power?
power (watts) = voltage (volts) x current (amps)
73
what are some advantages/disadvantages of series circuits?
- suitable for low power devices - voltage is shared - current is the same everywhere - more components = more resistance = less current - if one comment breaks the whole circuit is broken
74
what are some advantages/disadvantages of parallel circuits?
- high powered devices - current is shared - splits at a junction - parallel voltage is the same - if one component breaks the whole circuit continues functioning
75
what type of circuit is more appropriate for domestic lighting?
parallel circuit - if 1 bulb stops working, the others continue to work - bulbs do not share the brightness, each bulb gets the same amount of voltage supplied by the cell
76
how does the current in a series circuit depend on the applied voltage and number/ nature of other components?
as voltage increases the current also increases in general, the more components in a circuit, the lower the current
77
what's the relationship of voltage, current and resistance?
voltage = current x resistance
78
what is current?
rate of flow of charge
79
what is voltage?
energy transferred per unit charge passed voltage= current x resistance
80
what is a volt?
joule per coulomb voltage= current x resistance
81
what's the relationship between energy transferred, charge and voltage?
energy = charge x voltage
82
changing a metal rod:
remains neutral, hand acts as a earth wire so small pieces of paper not affected