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Measuring Electricity: Resistance

1) Electricity is difficult to understand because it is invisible, but can be conceptualized using water flow as an analogy. 2) Key terms like voltage, current, resistance, and power are defined and related using this water analogy. 3) Ohm's Law describes the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance and allows calculation of one if two are known.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
52 views2 pages

Measuring Electricity: Resistance

1) Electricity is difficult to understand because it is invisible, but can be conceptualized using water flow as an analogy. 2) Key terms like voltage, current, resistance, and power are defined and related using this water analogy. 3) Ohm's Law describes the relationship between voltage, current, and resistance and allows calculation of one if two are known.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Measuring Electricity

Electricity makes our lives easier, but it can seem like a mysterious force.
Measuring electricity is confusing because we cannot see it. We are
Resistance
familiar with terms such as watt, volt, and amp, but we do not have a Resistance (R) is a property that slows the flow of electrons. Using the
clear understanding of these terms. We buy a 100-watt light bulb, a tool water analogy, resistance is anything that slows water flow, such as a
that requires 120 volts, or an appliance that uses 8.8 amps, but we dont smaller pipe or fins on the inside of a pipe.
think about what those units mean. In electrical terms, the resistance of a conducting wire depends on the
Using the flow of water as an analogy can make electricity easier to properties of the metal used to make the wire and the wires diameter.
understand. The flow of electrons in a circuit is similar to water flowing Copper, aluminum, and silvermetals used in conducting wireshave
through a hose. If you could look into a hose at a given point, you would different resistance.
see a certain amount of water passing that point each second. The Resistance is measured in units called ohms (). There are devices called
amount of water depends on how much pressure is being applied resistors, with set resistances, that can be placed in circuits to reduce
how hard the water is being pushed. It also depends on the diameter or control the current flow. Any device placed in a circuit to do work is
of the hose. The harder the pressure and the larger the diameter of the called a load. The light bulb in a flashlight is a load. A television plugged
hose, the more water passes each second. The flow of electrons through into a wall outlet is also a load. Every load has resistance.
a wire depends on the electrical pressure pushing the electrons and on
the cross-sectional area of the wire.
Ohms Law
Voltage George Ohm, a German physicist, discovered that in many materials,
especially metals, the current that flows through a material is proportional
The pressure that pushes electrons in a circuit is called voltage. Using the
to the voltage. He found that if he doubled the voltage, the current also
water analogy, if a tank of water were suspended one meter above the
doubled. If he reduced the voltage by half, the current dropped by half.
ground with a 1-centimeter pipe coming out of the bottom, the water
The resistance of the material remained the same.
pressure would be similar to the force of a shower. If the same water
tank were suspended 10 meters above the ground, the force of the water
would be much greater, possibly enough to hurt you. Voltage
Voltage (V) is a measure of the pressure applied to electrons to make
them move. It is a measure of the strength of the current in a circuit and is
Water Tank
measured in volts (V). Just as the 10-meter tank applies greater pressure
than the 1-meter tank, a 10-volt power supply (such as a battery) would
apply greater pressure than a 1-volt power supply.
AA batteries are 1.5 volts; they apply a small amount of voltage for
lighting small flashlight bulbs. A car usually has a 12-volt batteryit
applies more voltage to push current through circuits to operate the
radio or defroster. The standard voltage of wall outlets is 120 voltsa
dangerous voltage. An electric clothes dryer is usually wired at 240 10 m
voltsa very dangerous voltage.

Current Water Tank

The flow of electrons can be compared to the flow of water. The water
1m
current is the number of molecules of water flowing past a fixed point;
electric current is the number of electrons flowing past a fixed point.
Electric current (I) is defined as electrons flowing between two points
having a difference in voltage. Current is measured in amperes or amps
(A). One ampere is 6.25 x 1018 electrons per second passing through a Current
circuit.
With water, as the diameter of the pipe increases, so does the amount
of water that can flow through it. With electricity, conducting wires take
Water Tank Water Tank
the place of the pipe. As the cross-sectional area of the wire increases, so
does the amount of electric current (number of electrons) that can flow
through it.

1 cm diameter 10 cm diameter
pipe pipe

64 Secondary Energy Infobook


This relationship is called Ohms Law and can be described using a
simple formula. If you know any two of the measurements, you can Resistance
calculate the third using the following formula:
voltage = current x resistance
V = IxR or V = Ax
Water Tank Water Tank
Electric Power
Power (P) is a measure of the rate of doing work, or the rate at which
energy is converted. Electric power is the rate at which electricity is
produced or consumed. Using the water analogy, electric power is
the combination of the water pressure (voltage) and the rate of flow
(current) that results in the ability to do work.
A large pipe carries more water (current) than a small pipe. Water at a
height of 10 meters has much greater force (voltage) than at a height
of one meter. The power of water flowing through a 1-centimeter
No
pipe from a height of one meter is much less than water through a Resistance Resistance
10-centimeter pipe from 10 meters.
Electric power is defined as the amount of electric current flowing due
to an applied voltage. It is the amount of electricity required to start or Electric Power
operate a load for one second. Electric power is measured in watts (W).
The formula is:
power = voltage x current Water Tank
P= VxI or W = VxA 10 cm pipe

Electrical Energy
Electrical energy introduces the concept of time to electric power. In
the water analogy, it would be the amount of water falling through 10 m
the pipe over a period of time, such as an hour. When we talk about
using power over time, we are talking about using energy. Using our
water example, we could look at how much work could be done by Water Tank
the water in the time that it takes for the tank to empty.
1m 1 cm pipe
The electrical energy that an appliance or device consumes can be
determined only if you know how long (time) it consumes electric
power at a specific rate (power). To find the amount of energy The same applies with electric power. You would not say you used 100
consumed, you multiply the rate of energy consumption (measured watts of light energy to read your book, because a watt represents the
in watts) by the amount of time (measured in hours) that it is being rate you use energy, not the total energy used. The amount of energy
consumed. Electrical energy is measured in watt-hours (Wh). used would be calculated by multiplying the rate by the amount of
time you read.
energy = power x time
E=Pxt or E = W x h = Wh If you read for five hours with a 100-W light bulb, for example, you
would use the formula as follows:
Another way to think about power and energy is with an analogy to
energy = power x time (E = P x t)
traveling. If a person travels in a car at a rate of 40 miles per hour (mph),
energy = 100 W x 5 hour = 500 Wh
to find the total distance traveled, you would multiply the rate of travel
by the amount of time you traveled at that rate. One watt-hour is a very small amount of electrical energy. Usually, we
measure electric power in larger units called kilowatt-hours (kWh)
If a car travels for 1 hour at 40 miles per hour, it would travel 40 miles.
or 1,000 watt-hours (kilo = thousand). A kilowatt-hour is the unit
distance = 40 mph x 1 hour = 40 miles that utilities use when billing most customers. The average cost of a
If a car travels for 3 hours at 40 miles per hour, it would travel 120 miles. kilowatt-hour of electricity for residential customers is about $0.125.

distance = 40 mph x 3 hours = 120 miles To calculate the cost of reading with a 100-W light bulb for five hours,
you would change the watt-hours into kilowatt-hours, then multiply
The distance traveled represents the work done by the car. When we the kilowatt-hours used by the cost per kilowatt-hour, as shown below:
look at power, we are talking about the rate that electrical energy is
500 Wh x 1 kW = 0.5 kWh
being produced or consumed. Energy is analogous to the distance 1,000W
traveled or the work done by the car. 0.5 kWh x $0.125/kWh = $0.063
A person wouldnt say he took a 40-mile per hour trip because that
Therefore, it would cost about six cents to read for five hours with a
is the rate. The person would say he took a 40-mile trip or a 120-mile
100-W light bulb.
trip. We would describe the trip in terms of distance traveled, not rate
traveled. The distance represents the amount of work done.

2016 The NEED Project 8408 Kao Circle, Manassas, VA 20110 1.800.875.5029 www.NEED.org 65

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