resistance and ohm’s law

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Resistance and Ohm’s Law

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Resistance and Ohm’s Law. When electric charges flow they experience opposition or resistance which reduces the amount of energy they have Greater resistance -> greater amount of energy each charge has to give up. Filament – high resistance - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Resistance and Ohm’s Law

Page 2: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

When electric charges flow they experience opposition or resistance which reduces the amount of energy they have

Greater resistance -> greater amount of energy each charge has to give up

Page 4: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

The amount of energy (voltage) required to push electrons (current) through a conductor

Electric Resistance

Page 5: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

German Physicist Georg Ohm determined that for a given conductor, the ratio of voltage to current (V/I) is constant

We call this constant resistance (Measured in Ohms - )

= IVConstantResistance

Page 6: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Relates voltage, current and resistance

Note: E stands for electric potential (commonly known as voltage)

Ohm’s Law

IVR

Page 7: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Electrical Insultator ◦Prevents the transfer of electric charges

◦Ex: Air, glass, rubber, paperElectrical conductor◦Low resistance which allows electric charges to flow easily

◦Ex: copper

Page 8: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

A single cell is set-up in a circuit with a switch and a resistor. For the resistor, a voltmeter is set-up and it measures 1.3V and an ammeter is set-up and it measures 3.5A.

a) Draw the circuit with the correct set-up of a voltmeter and ammeter

b) Calculate the resistance of the resistor

Example 1:

Page 9: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

If a resistor has a resistance of 1000 and the current is 2.0A. What will be the voltage drop across the resistor?

Example 2:

Page 10: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Pg 330 # 1aPg 332 # 1, 3-5Pg 331 # 5ab,7,8

Work

Page 11: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Circuit Analysis

Page 15: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

We have four tools we can use to analyze circuits:◦Kirchoff’s Current Law (KCL)◦Kirchoff’s Voltage Law (KVL)◦Ohm’s Law◦Equivalent Resistance (Series and Parallel)

Analysis of Circuits

Page 16: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

At any junction (Point) in the circuit, the current going in equals the current going out

At a point, Iin = Iout

Note: In any series circuit, every point has the same current

Kirchoff’s Current Law (KCL)

Page 17: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Examples

Page 18: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

In any complete path in a circuit, the sum of voltage rises (sources) is equal to the sum of voltage drops (loads)

For a path,Vrises = Vdrops

Kirchoff’s Voltage Law (KVL)

Page 19: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Examples

Page 20: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Pg 337 # 1-3Pg 343 # 1, 2, 4

Work

Page 21: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

If you have many resistors (or loads) in a circuit, finding the equivalent resistance allows you to replace multiple resistors with a single resistor

This allows easier analysis of circuits

Equivalent Resistance

Page 22: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Equivalent Resistance in Series

ns RRRRR ...321

Page 23: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Equivalent Resistance in Parallel

nP RRRRR1...1111

321

The easiest way to put this formula into a calculator is to use your inverse button (x-1)

Page 24: Resistance and  Ohm’s Law

Pg 339 # 4-6Pg 340 # 7

Work