4. 4
Part 4. Is the switch open or closed?
Would the light be on or off?
1. Open and On
2. Open and Off
3. Closed and On
4. Closed and Off
5. 5
Part 4. The Switch works when the lever is
down and touching the metal – this
completes the circuit.
6. 6
Part 5.
a
Which of the following materials can
electricity NOT travel through?
1. metal
2. water
3. air
What are conductors?
What are insulators?
material through which electric
current flows easily.
material through which electric
current cannot move
7. 7
BACKGROUND
Key Questions before Voltage and
Current lab
What “flow of understanding”
provides the necessary
foundation for an
understanding of electricity?
How does electricity behave?
8. 8
Electric Circuits
Provide a complete path through which
electricity can travel
Electric Circuits aren’t confined to appliances
wires and devices built by people
Nerves in body are an electric current connection
between muscles and the brain
Tail of the electric eel moves current when doing
the “work” of stunning a fish it shocks
Earth makes a giant circuit when lightning carries
current between the clouds and the ground.
9. Electric current
Electric current is caused by moving
electric charge.
Electric current comes from the motion of
electrons.
current
10. Electric current
Electric current is similar in
some ways to a current of
water.
Like electric current, water
current can carry energy and
do work.
A waterwheel turns when a
current of water exerts a
force on it.
11. Electric Circuits
An electric circuit is a complete path through
which electric current travels.
A good example of a circuit is the one found in
an electric toaster.
12. Electric Circuits
Wires in electric circuits are similar in some
ways to pipes and hoses that carry water.
13. Electric Circuits
When drawing a circuit diagram, symbols are
used to represent each part of the circuit.
15. Resistors
A resistor is an electrical device that uses the
energy carried by electric current in a specific
way.
Any electrical device that uses energy can be
shown with a resistor symbol.
16.
17. Current in a circuit
Current only flows
when there is a
complete and
unbroken path, or a
closed circuit.
Flipping a switch to
the “off” position
creates an open
circuit by making a
break in the wire.
18.
19.
20. Series Circuits
In a series circuit,
current can only
take one path, so
the current is the
same at all points in
the circuit.
21. Electrical Systems
Inexpensive strings of
holiday lights are
wired with the bulbs in
series.
If you remove one of
the bulbs from its
socket, the whole
string of mini bulbs
will go out.
22. Current and resistance in series
circuits
If you know the resistance of each device,
you can find the total resistance of the
circuit by adding up the resistance of each
device.
23. Current and resistance in series
circuits
Think of adding
resistances like
adding pinches to
a hose.
Each pinch adds
some resistance.
26. Solving Problems
A series circuit contains a
12-V battery and three
bulbs with resistances
of1Ω, 2 Ω, and 3 Ω.
What is the current in the
circuit?
27. 1. Looking for:
…current (amps)
2. Given
…Voltage = 12V; resistances = 1Ω, 2 Ω, 3 Ω.
3. Relationships:
Rtot = R1+R2+R3
Ohm’s Law I = V ÷ R
4. Solution
Rtot = 6 Ω
I = 12 V ÷ 6 Ω = 2 amps
Solving Problems
31. Voltage and parallel circuits
If the voltage is
the same along a
wire, then the
same voltage
appears across
each branch of a
parallel circuit.
32. Voltage and parallel circuits
Parallel circuits have two advantages
over series circuits.
1. Each device in the circuit has a voltage drop
equal to the full battery voltage.
2. Each device in the circuit may be turned off
independently without stopping the current in
the other devices in the circuit.
33. Current and parallel circuits
Each branch
works
independently so
the total current
in a parallel
circuit is the sum
of the currents in
each branch.
34. Calculating in circuits
In a series circuit,
adding an extra
resistor increases the
total resistance of the
circuit.
In a parallel circuit,
more current flows so
the total resistance
decreases.
35.
36. Parallel vs. Series
Remember: series/same/current;
parallel/same/voltage.
Use Ohm’s law for both.
37. Short circuits
A short circuit is a parallel path in a circuit
with very low resistance.
A short circuit can be created accidentally
by making a parallel branch with a wire.
38.
39. Short circuits
Each circuit has its own fuse or circuit breaker
that stops the current if it exceeds the safe
amount, usually 15 or 20 amps
If you turn on too many appliances in one
circuit at the same time, the circuit breaker or
fuse cuts off the current.
To restore the current, you must FIRST
disconnect some or all of the appliances.
40. Fuses
In newer homes, flip the tripped
circuit breaker.
In older homes you must replace
the blown fuse (in older homes).
Fuses are also used in car
electrical systems and in
electrical devices such as
televisions or in electrical meters
used to test circuits.