Conventional versus electron flow
"The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of
them to choose from."
Andres S. Tannenbaum, computer science professor
When Benjamin Franklin made his conjecture regarding the
direction of charge flow (from the smooth wax to the rough wool), he
set a precedent for electrical notation that exists to this day,
despite the fact that we know electrons are the constituent units of
charge, and that they are displaced from the wool to the wax -- not
from the wax to the wool -- when those two substances are rubbed
together. This is why electrons are said to have a negative
charge: because Franklin assumed electric charge moved in the
opposite direction that it actually does, and so objects he called
"negative" (representing a deficiency of charge) actually have a
surplus of electrons.
By the time the true direction of electron flow was discovered,
the nomenclature of "positive" and "negative" had already been so
well established in the scientific community that no effort was made
to change it, although calling electrons "positive" would make more
sense in referring to "excess" charge. You see, the terms "positive"
and "negative" are human inventions, and as such have no absolute
meaning beyond our own conventions of language and scientific
description. Franklin could have just as easily referred to a
surplus of charge as "black" and a deficiency as "white," in which
case scientists would speak of electrons having a "white" charge
(assuming the same incorrect conjecture of charge position between
wax and wool).
However, because we tend to associate the word "positive" with
"surplus" and "negative" with "deficiency," the standard label for
electron charge does seem backward. Because of this, many engineers
decided to retain the old concept of electricity with "positive"
referring to a surplus of charge, and label charge flow (current)
accordingly. This became known as conventional flow notation:
Others chose to designate charge flow according to the actual
motion of electrons in a circuit. This form of symbology became
known as electron flow notation:
In conventional flow notation, we show the motion of charge
according to the (technically incorrect) labels of + and -. This way
the labels make sense, but the direction of charge flow is
incorrect. In electron flow notation, we follow the actual motion of
electrons in the circuit, but the + and - labels seem backward. Does
it matter, really, how we designate charge flow in a circuit? Not
really, so long as we're consistent in the use of our symbols. You
may follow an imagined direction of current (conventional flow) or
the actual (electron flow) with equal success insofar as circuit
analysis is concerned. Concepts of voltage, current, resistance,
continuity, and even mathematical treatments such as Ohm's Law
(chapter 2) and Kirchhoff's Laws (chapter 6) remain just as valid
with either style of notation.
You will find conventional flow notation followed by most
electrical engineers, and illustrated in most engineering textbooks.
Electron flow is most often seen in introductory textbooks (this one
included) and in the writings of professional scientists, especially
solid-state physicists who are concerned with the actual motion of
electrons in substances. These preferences are cultural, in the
sense that certain groups of people have found it advantageous to
envision electric current motion in certain ways. Being that most
analyses of electric circuits do not depend on a technically
accurate depiction of charge flow, the choice between conventional
flow notation and electron flow notation is arbitrary . . . almost.
Many electrical devices tolerate real currents of either
direction with no difference in operation. Incandescent lamps (the
type utilizing a thin metal filament that glows white-hot with
sufficient current), for example, produce light with equal
efficiency regardless of current direction. They even function well
on alternating current (AC), where the direction changes rapidly
over time. Conductors and switches operate irrespective of current
direction, as well. The technical term for this irrelevance of
charge flow is nonpolarization. We could say then, that
incandescent lamps, switches, and wires are nonpolarized
components. Conversely, any device that functions differently on
currents of different direction would be called a polarized
device.
There are many such polarized devices used in electric circuits.
Most of them are made of so-called semiconductor substances,
and as such aren't examined in detail until the third volume of this
book series. Like switches, lamps, and batteries, each of these
devices is represented in a schematic diagram by a unique symbol. As
one might guess, polarized device symbols typically contain an arrow
within them, somewhere, to designate a preferred or exclusive
direction of current. This is where the competing notations of
conventional and electron flow really matter. Because engineers from
long ago have settled on conventional flow as their "culture's"
standard notation, and because engineers are the same people who
invent electrical devices and the symbols representing them, the
arrows used in these devices' symbols all point in the direction
of conventional flow, not electron flow. That is to say, all of
these devices' symbols have arrow marks that point against
the actual flow of electrons through them.
Perhaps the best example of a polarized device is the diode.
A diode is a one-way "valve" for electric current, analogous to a
check valve for those familiar with plumbing and hydraulic
systems. Ideally, a diode provides unimpeded flow for current in one
direction (little or no resistance), but prevents flow in the other
direction (infinite resistance). Its schematic symbol looks like
this:
Placed within a battery/lamp circuit, its operation is as such:
When the diode is facing in the proper direction to permit
current, the lamp glows. Otherwise, the diode blocks all electron
flow just like a break in the circuit, and the lamp will not glow.
If we label the circuit current using conventional flow notation,
the arrow symbol of the diode makes perfect sense: the triangular
arrowhead points in the direction of charge flow, from positive to
negative:
On the other hand, if we use electron flow notation to show the
true direction of electron travel around the circuit, the
diode's arrow symbology seems backward:
For this reason alone, many people choose to make conventional
flow their notation of choice when drawing the direction of charge
motion in a circuit. If for no other reason, the symbols associated
with semiconductor components like diodes make more sense this way.
However, others choose to show the true direction of electron travel
so as to avoid having to tell themselves, "just remember the
electrons are actually moving the other way" whenever the
true direction of electron motion becomes an issue.
In this series of textbooks, I have committed to using electron
flow notation. Ironically, this was not my first choice. I found it
much easier when I was first learning electronics to use
conventional flow notation, primarily because of the directions of
semiconductor device symbol arrows. Later, when I began my first
formal training in electronics, my instructor insisted on using
electron flow notation in his lectures. In fact, he asked that we
take our textbooks (which were illustrated using conventional flow
notation) and use our pens to change the directions of all the
current arrows so as to point the "correct" way! His preference was
not arbitrary, though. In his 20-year career as a U.S. Navy
electronics technician, he worked on a lot of vacuum-tube equipment.
Before the advent of semiconductor components like transistors,
devices known as vacuum tubes or electron tubes were
used to amplify small electrical signals. These devices work on the
phenomenon of electrons hurtling through a vacuum, their rate of
flow controlled by voltages applied between metal plates and grids
placed within their path, and are best understood when visualized
using electron flow notation.
When I graduated from that training program, I went back to my
old habit of conventional flow notation, primarily for the sake of
minimizing confusion with component symbols, since vacuum tubes are
all but obsolete except in special applications. Collecting notes
for the writing of this book, I had full intention of illustrating
it using conventional flow.
Years later, when I became a teacher of electronics, the
curriculum for the program I was going to teach had already been
established around the notation of electron flow. Oddly enough, this
was due in part to the legacy of my first electronics instructor
(the 20-year Navy veteran), but that's another story entirely! Not
wanting to confuse students by teaching "differently" from the other
instructors, I had to overcome my habit and get used to visualizing
electron flow instead of conventional. Because I wanted my book to
be a useful resource for my students, I begrudgingly changed plans
and illustrated it with all the arrows pointing the "correct" way.
Oh well, sometimes you just can't win!
On a positive note (no pun intended), I have subsequently
discovered that some students prefer electron flow notation when
first learning about the behavior of semiconductive substances.
Also, the habit of visualizing electrons flowing against the
arrows of polarized device symbols isn't that difficult to learn,
and in the end I've found that I can follow the operation of a
circuit equally well using either mode of notation. Still, I
sometimes wonder if it would all be much easier if we went back to
the source of the confusion -- Ben Franklin's errant conjecture --
and fixed the problem there, calling electrons "positive" and
protons "negative."
Lessons In Electric Circuits copyright (C) 2000-2002 Tony
R. Kuphaldt, under the terms and conditions of the
Design
Science License
|