Static electricity
It was discovered centuries ago that certain types of materials
would mysteriously attract one another being rubbed together. For
example: after rubbing a piece of silk against a piece of glass, the
silk and glass would tend to stick together. Indeed, there was an
attractive force that could be demonstrated even when the two
materials were separated:
Glass and silk aren't the only materials known to behave like
this. Anyone who has ever brushed up against a latex balloon only to
find that it tries to stick to them has experienced this same
phenomenon. Paraffin wax and wool cloth are another pair of
materials early experimenters recognized as manifesting attractive
forces after being rubbed together:
This phenomenon became even more interesting when it was
discovered that identical materials, after having been rubbed with
their respective cloths, always repelled each other:
It was also noted that when a piece of glass rubbed with silk was
exposed to a piece of wax rubbed with wool, the two materials would
attract one another:
Furthermore, it was found that any material demonstrating
properties of attraction or repulsion after being rubbed could be
classed into one of two distinct categories: attracted to glass and
repelled by wax, or repelled by glass and attracted to wax. It was
either one or the other: there were no materials found that would be
attracted to or repelled by both glass and wax, or that reacted to
one without reacting to the other.
More attention was directed toward the pieces of cloth used to do
the rubbing. It was discovered that after rubbing two pieces of
glass with two pieces of silk cloth, not only did the glass pieces
repel each other, but so did the cloths. The same phenomenon held
for the pieces of wool used to rub the wax:
Now, this was really strange to witness. After all, none of these
objects were visibly altered by the rubbing, yet they definitely
behaved differently than before they were rubbed. Whatever change
took place to make these materials attract or repel one another was
invisible.
Some experimenters speculated that invisible "fluids" were being
transferred from one object to another during the process of
rubbing, and that these "fluids" were able to effect a physical
force over a distance. Charles Dufay was one the early experimenters
who demonstrated that there were definitely two different types of
changes wrought by rubbing certain pairs of objects together. The
fact that there was more than one type of change manifested in these
materials was evident by the fact that there were two types of
forces produced: attraction and repulsion. The
hypothetical fluid transfer became known as a charge.
One pioneering researcher, Benjamin Franklin, came to the
conclusion that there was only one fluid exchanged between rubbed
objects, and that the two different "charges" were nothing more than
either an excess or a deficiency of that one fluid. After
experimenting with wax and wool, Franklin suggested that the coarse
wool removed some of this invisible fluid from the smooth wax,
causing an excess of fluid on the wool and a deficiency of fluid on
the wax. The resulting disparity in fluid content between the wool
and wax would then cause an attractive force, as the fluid tried to
regain its former balance between the two materials.
Postulating the existence of a single "fluid" that was either
gained or lost through rubbing accounted best for the observed
behavior: that all these materials fell neatly into one of two
categories when rubbed, and most importantly, that the two active
materials rubbed against each other always fell into opposing
categories as evidenced by their invariable attraction to one
another. In other words, there was never a time where two materials
rubbed against each other both became either positive or
negative.
Following Franklin's speculation of the wool rubbing something
off of the wax, the type of charge that was associated with rubbed
wax became known as "negative" (because it was supposed to have a
deficiency of fluid) while the type of charge associated with the
rubbing wool became known as "positive" (because it was supposed to
have an excess of fluid). Little did he know that his innocent
conjecture would cause much confusion for students of electricity in
the future!
Precise measurements of electrical charge were carried out by the
French physicist Charles Coulomb in the 1780's using a device called
a torsional balance measuring the force generated between two
electrically charged objects. The results of Coulomb's work led to
the development of a unit of electrical charge named in his honor,
the coulomb. If two "point" objects (hypothetical objects
having no appreciable surface area) were equally charged to a
measure of 1 coulomb, and placed 1 meter (approximately 1 yard)
apart, they would generate a force of about 9 billion newtons
(approximately 2 billion pounds), either attracting or repelling
depending on the types of charges involved.
It discovered much later that this "fluid" was actually composed
of extremely small bits of matter called electrons, so named
in honor of the ancient Greek word for amber: another material
exhibiting charged properties when rubbed with cloth.
Experimentation has since revealed that all objects are composed of
extremely small "building-blocks" known as atoms, and that
these atoms are in turn composed of smaller components known as
particles. The three fundamental particles comprising atoms are
called protons, neutrons, and electrons. Atoms
are far too small to be seen, but if we could look at one, it might
appear something like this:
Even though each atom in a piece of material tends to hold
together as a unit, there's actually a lot of empty space between
the electrons and the cluster of protons and neutrons residing in
the middle.
This crude model is that of the element carbon, with six protons,
six neutrons, and six electrons. In any atom, the protons and
neutrons are very tightly bound together, which is an important
quality. The tightly-bound clump of protons and neutrons in the
center of the atom is called the nucleus, and the number of
protons in an atom's nucleus determines its elemental identity:
change the number of protons in an atom's nucleus, and you change
the type of atom that it is. In fact, if you could remove three
protons from the nucleus of an atom of lead, you will have achieved
the old alchemists' dream of producing an atom of gold! The tight
binding of protons in the nucleus is responsible for the stable
identity of chemical elements, and the failure of alchemists to
achieve their dream.
Neutrons are much less influential on the chemical character and
identity of an atom than protons, although they are just as hard to
add to or remove from the nucleus, being so tightly bound. If
neutrons are added or gained, the atom will still retain the same
chemical identity, but its mass will change slightly and it may
acquire strange nuclear properties such as radioactivity.
However, electrons have significantly more freedom to move around
in an atom than either protons or neutrons. In fact, they can be
knocked out of their respective positions (even leaving the atom
entirely!) by far less energy than what it takes to dislodge
particles in the nucleus. If this happens, the atom still retains
its chemical identity, but an important imbalance occurs. Electrons
and protons are unique in the fact that they are attracted to one
another over a distance. It is this attraction over distance which
causes the attraction between rubbed objects, where electrons are
moved away from their original atoms to reside around atoms of
another object.
Electrons tend to repel other electrons over a distance, as do
protons with other protons. The only reason protons bind together in
the nucleus of an atom is because of a much stronger force called
the strong nuclear force which has effect only under very
short distances. Because of this attraction/repulsion behavior
between individual particles, electrons and protons are said to have
opposite electric charges. That is, each electron has a negative
charge, and each proton a positive charge. In equal numbers within
an atom, they counteract each other's presence so that the net
charge within the atom is zero. This is why the picture of a carbon
atom had six electrons: to balance out the electric charge of the
six protons in the nucleus. If electrons leave or extra electrons
arrive, the atom's net electric charge will be imbalanced, leaving
the atom "charged" as a whole, causing it to interact with charged
particles and other charged atoms nearby. Neutrons are neither
attracted to or repelled by electrons, protons, or even other
neutrons, and are consequently categorized as having no charge at
all.
The process of electrons arriving or leaving is exactly what
happens when certain combinations of materials are rubbed together:
electrons from the atoms of one material are forced by the rubbing
to leave their respective atoms and transfer over to the atoms of
the other material. In other words, electrons comprise the "fluid"
hypothesized by Benjamin Franklin. The operational definition of a
coulomb as the unit of electrical charge (in terms of force
generated between point charges) was found to be equal to an excess
or deficiency of about 6,250,000,000,000,000,000 electrons. Or,
stated in reverse terms, one electron has a charge of about
0.00000000000000000016 coulombs. Being that one electron is the
smallest known carrier of electric charge, this last figure of
charge for the electron is defined as the elementary charge.
The result of an imbalance of this "fluid" (electrons) between
objects is called static electricity. It is called "static"
because the displaced electrons tend to remain stationary after
being moved from one material to another. In the case of wax and
wool, it was determined through further experimentation that
electrons in the wool actually transferred to the atoms in the wax,
which is exactly opposite of Franklin's conjecture! In honor of
Franklin's designation of the wax's charge being "negative" and the
wool's charge being "positive," electrons are said to have a
"negative" charging influence. Thus, an object whose atoms have
received a surplus of electrons is said to be negatively
charged, while an object whose atoms are lacking electrons is said
to be positively charged, as confusing as these designations
may seem. By the time the true nature of electric "fluid" was
discovered, Franklin's nomenclature of electric charge was too well
established to be easily changed, and so it remains to this day.
- REVIEW:
- All materials are made up of tiny "building blocks" known as
atoms.
- All atoms contain particles called electrons,
protons, and neutrons.
- Electrons have a negative (-) electric charge.
- Protons have a positive (+) electric charge.
- Neutrons have no electric charge.
- Electrons can be dislodged from atoms much easier than protons
or neutrons.
- The number of protons in an atom's nucleus determines its
identity as a unique element.
Conductors, insulators, and electron flow
The electrons of different types of atoms have different degrees
of freedom to move around. With some types of materials, such as
metals, the outermost electrons in the atoms are so loosely bound
that they chaotically move in the space between the atoms of that
material by nothing more than the influence of room-temperature heat
energy. Because these virtually unbound electrons are free to leave
their respective atoms and float around in the space between
adjacent atoms, they are often called free electrons.
In other types of materials such as glass, the atoms' electrons
have very little freedom to move around. While external forces such
as physical rubbing can force some of these electrons to leave their
respective atoms and transfer to the atoms of another material, they
do not move between atoms within that material very easily.
This relative mobility of electrons within a material is known as
electric conductivity. Conductivity is determined by the
types of atoms in a material (the number of protons in each atom's
nucleus, determining its chemical identity) and how the atoms are
linked together with one another. Materials with high electron
mobility (many free electrons) are called conductors, while
materials with low electron mobility (few or no free electrons) are
called insulators.
Here are a few common examples of conductors and insulators:
- Conductors:
- silver
- copper
- gold
- aluminum
- iron
- steel
- brass
- bronze
- mercury
- graphite
- dirty water
- concrete
- Insulators:
- glass
- rubber
- oil
- asphalt
- fiberglass
- porcelain
- ceramic
- quartz
- (dry) cotton
- (dry) paper
- (dry) wood
- plastic
- air
- diamond
- pure water
It must be understood that not all conductive materials have the
same level of conductivity, and not all insulators are equally
resistant to electron motion. Electrical conductivity is analogous
to the transparency of certain materials to light: materials that
easily "conduct" light are called "transparent," while those that
don't are called "opaque." However, not all transparent materials
are equally conductive to light. Window glass is better than most
plastics, and certainly better than "clear" fiberglass. So it is
with electrical conductors, some being better than others.
For instance, silver is the best conductor in the "conductors"
list, offering easier passage for electrons than any other material
cited. Dirty water and concrete are also listed as conductors, but
these materials are substantially less conductive than any metal.
Physical dimension also impacts conductivity. For instance, if we
take two strips of the same conductive material -- one thin and the
other thick -- the thick strip will prove to be a better conductor
than the thin for the same length. If we take another pair of strips
-- this time both with the same thickness but one shorter than the
other -- the shorter one will offer easier passage to electrons than
the long one. This is analogous to water flow in a pipe: a fat pipe
offers easier passage than a skinny pipe, and a short pipe is easier
for water to move through than a long pipe, all other dimensions
being equal.
It should also be understood that some materials experience
changes in their electrical properties under different conditions.
Glass, for instance, is a very good insulator at room temperature,
but becomes a conductor when heated to a very high temperature.
Gases such as air, normally insulating materials, also become
conductive if heated to very high temperatures. Most metals become
poorer conductors when heated, and better conductors when cooled.
Many conductive materials become perfectly conductive (this is
called superconductivity) at extremely low temperatures.
While the normal motion of "free" electrons in a conductor is
random, with no particular direction or speed, electrons can be
influenced to move in a coordinated fashion through a conductive
material. This uniform motion of electrons is what we call
electricity, or electric current. To be more precise, it
could be called dynamic electricity in contrast to static
electricity, which is an unmoving accumulation of electric charge.
Just like water flowing through the emptiness of a pipe, electrons
are able to move within the empty space within and between the atoms
of a conductor. The conductor may appear to be solid to our eyes,
but any material composed of atoms is mostly empty space! The
liquid-flow analogy is so fitting that the motion of electrons
through a conductor is often referred to as a "flow."
A noteworthy observation may be made here. As each electron moves
uniformly through a conductor, it pushes on the one ahead of it,
such that all the electrons move together as a group. The starting
and stopping of electron flow through the length of a conductive
path is virtually instantaneous from one end of a conductor to the
other, even though the motion of each electron may be very slow. An
approximate analogy is that of a tube filled end-to-end with
marbles:
The tube is full of marbles, just as a conductor is full of free
electrons ready to be moved by an outside influence. If a single
marble is suddenly inserted into this full tube on the left-hand
side, another marble will immediately try to exit the tube on the
right. Even though each marble only traveled a short distance, the
transfer of motion through the tube is virtually instantaneous from
the left end to the right end, no matter how long the tube is. With
electricity, the overall effect from one end of a conductor to the
other happens at the speed of light: a swift 186,000 miles per
second!!! Each individual electron, though, travels through the
conductor at a much slower pace.
If we want electrons to flow in a certain direction to a certain
place, we must provide the proper path for them to move, just as a
plumber must install piping to get water to flow where he or she
wants it to flow. To facilitate this, wires are made of
highly conductive metals such as copper or aluminum in a wide
variety of sizes.
Remember that electrons can flow only when they have the
opportunity to move in the space between the atoms of a material.
This means that there can be electric current only where
there exists a continuous path of conductive material providing a
conduit for electrons to travel through. In the marble analogy,
marbles can flow into the left-hand side of the tube (and,
consequently, through the tube) if and only if the tube is open on
the right-hand side for marbles to flow out. If the tube is blocked
on the right-hand side, the marbles will just "pile up" inside the
tube, and marble "flow" will not occur. The same holds true for
electric current: the continuous flow of electrons requires there be
an unbroken path to permit that flow. Let's look at a diagram to
illustrate how this works:
A thin, solid line (as shown above) is the conventional symbol
for a continuous piece of wire. Since the wire is made of a
conductive material, such as copper, its constituent atoms have many
free electrons which can easily move through the wire. However,
there will never be a continuous or uniform flow of electrons within
this wire unless they have a place to come from and a place to go.
Let's add an hypothetical electron "Source" and "Destination:"
Now, with the Electron Source pushing new electrons into the wire
on the left-hand side, electron flow through the wire can occur (as
indicated by the arrows pointing from left to right). However, the
flow will be interrupted if the conductive path formed by the wire
is broken:
Since air is an insulating material, and an air gap separates the
two pieces of wire, the once-continuous path has now been broken,
and electrons cannot flow from Source to Destination. This is like
cutting a water pipe in two and capping off the broken ends of the
pipe: water can't flow if there's no exit out of the pipe. In
electrical terms, we had a condition of electrical continuity
when the wire was in one piece, and now that continuity is broken
with the wire cut and separated.
If we were to take another piece of wire leading to the
Destination and simply make physical contact with the wire leading
to the Source, we would once again have a continuous path for
electrons to flow. The two dots in the diagram indicate physical
(metal-to-metal) contact between the wire pieces:
Now, we have continuity from the Source, to the newly-made
connection, down, to the right, and up to the Destination. This is
analogous to putting a "tee" fitting in one of the capped-off pipes
and directing water through a new segment of pipe to its
destination. Please take note that the broken segment of wire on the
right hand side has no electrons flowing through it, because it is
no longer part of a complete path from Source to Destination.
It is interesting to note that no "wear" occurs within wires due
to this electric current, unlike water-carrying pipes which are
eventually corroded and worn by prolonged flows. Electrons do
encounter some degree of friction as they move, however, and this
friction can generate heat in a conductor. This is a topic we'll
explore in much greater detail later.
- REVIEW:
- In conductive materials, the outer electrons in each
atom can easily come or go, and are called free electrons.
- In insulating materials, the outer electrons are not so
free to move.
- All metals are electrically conductive.
- Dynamic electricity, or electric current, is the
uniform motion of electrons through a conductor. Static
electricity is an unmoving, accumulated charge formed by
either an excess or deficiency of electrons in an object.
- For electrons to flow continuously (indefinitely) through a
conductor, there must be a complete, unbroken path for them to
move both into and out of that conductor.
Electric circuits
You might have been wondering how electrons can continuously flow
in a uniform direction through wires without the benefit of these
hypothetical electron Sources and Destinations. In order for the
Source-and-Destination scheme to work, both would have to have an
infinite capacity for electrons in order to sustain a continuous
flow! Using the marble-and-tube analogy, the marble source and
marble destination buckets would have to be infinitely large to
contain enough marble capacity for a "flow" of marbles to be
sustained.
The answer to this paradox is found in the concept of a
circuit: a never-ending looped pathway for electrons. If we take
a wire, or many wires joined end-to-end, and loop it around so that
it forms a continuous pathway, we have the means to support a
uniform flow of electrons without having to resort to infinite
Sources and Destinations:
Each electron advancing clockwise in this circuit pushes on the
one in front of it, which pushes on the one in front of it, and so
on, and so on, just like a hula-hoop filled with marbles. Now, we
have the capability of supporting a continuous flow of electrons
indefinitely without the need for infinite electron supplies and
dumps. All we need to maintain this flow is a continuous means of
motivation for those electrons, which we'll address in the next
section of this chapter.
It must be realized that continuity is just as important in a
circuit as it is in a straight piece of wire. Just as in the example
with the straight piece of wire between the electron Source and
Destination, any break in this circuit will prevent electrons from
flowing through it:
An important principle to realize here is that it doesn't
matter where the break occurs. Any discontinuity in the circuit
will prevent electron flow throughout the entire circuit. Unless
there is a continuous, unbroken loop of conductive material for
electrons to flow through, a sustained flow simply cannot be
maintained.
- REVIEW:
- A circuit is an unbroken loop of conductive material
that allows electrons to flow through continuously without
beginning or end.
- If a circuit is "broken," that means it's conductive elements
no longer form a complete path, and continuous electron flow
cannot occur in it.
- The location of a break in a circuit is irrelevant to its
inability to sustain continuous electron flow. Any break,
anywhere in a circuit prevents electron flow throughout the
circuit.
Voltage and current
As was previously mentioned, we need more than just a continuous
path (circuit) before a continuous flow of electrons will occur: we
also need some means to push these electrons around the circuit.
Just like marbles in a tube or water in a pipe, it takes some kind
of influencing force to initiate flow. With electrons, this force is
the same force at work in static electricity: the force produced by
an imbalance of electric charge.
If we take the examples of wax and wool which have been rubbed
together, we find that the surplus of electrons in the wax (negative
charge) and the deficit of electrons in the wool (positive charge)
creates an imbalance of charge between them. This imbalance
manifests itself as an attractive force between the two objects:
If a conductive wire is placed between the charged wax and wool,
electrons will flow through it, as some of the excess electrons in
the wax rush through the wire to get back to the wool, filling the
deficiency of electrons there:
The imbalance of electrons between the atoms in the wax and the
atoms in the wool creates a force between the two materials. With no
path for electrons to flow from the wax to the wool, all this force
can do is attract the two objects together. Now that a conductor
bridges the insulating gap, however, the force will provoke
electrons to flow in a uniform direction through the wire, if only
momentarily, until the charge in that area neutralizes and the force
between the wax and wool diminishes.
The electric charge formed between these two materials by rubbing
them together serves to store a certain amount of energy. This
energy is not unlike the energy stored in a high reservoir of water
that has been pumped from a lower-level pond:
The influence of gravity on the water in the reservoir creates a
force that attempts to move the water down to the lower level again.
If a suitable pipe is run from the reservoir back to the pond, water
will flow under the influence of gravity down from the reservoir,
through the pipe:
It takes energy to pump that water from the low-level pond to the
high-level reservoir, and the movement of water through the piping
back down to its original level constitutes a releasing of energy
stored from previous pumping.
If the water is pumped to an even higher level, it will take even
more energy to do so, thus more energy will be stored, and more
energy released if the water is allowed to flow through a pipe back
down again:
Electrons are not much different. If we rub wax and wool
together, we "pump" electrons away from their normal "levels,"
creating a condition where a force exists between the wax and wool,
as the electrons seek to re-establish their former positions (and
balance within their respective atoms). The force attracting
electrons back to their original positions around the positive
nuclei of their atoms is analogous to the force gravity exerts on
water in the reservoir, trying to draw it down to its former level.
Just as the pumping of water to a higher level results in energy
being stored, "pumping" electrons to create an electric charge
imbalance results in a certain amount of energy being stored in that
imbalance. And, just as providing a way for water to flow back down
from the heights of the reservoir results in a release of that
stored energy, providing a way for electrons to flow back to their
original "levels" results in a release of stored energy.
When the electrons are poised in that static condition (just like
water sitting still, high in a reservoir), the energy stored there
is called potential energy, because it has the possibility
(potential) of release that has not been fully realized yet. When
you scuff your rubber-soled shoes against a fabric carpet on a dry
day, you create an imbalance of electric charge between yourself and
the carpet. The action of scuffing your feet stores energy in the
form of an imbalance of electrons forced from their original
locations. If this charge (static electricity) is stationary, and
you won't realize that energy is being stored at all. However, once
you place your hand against a metal doorknob (with lots of electron
mobility to neutralize your electric charge), that stored energy
will be released in the form of a sudden flow of electrons through
your hand, and you will perceive it as an electric shock!
This potential energy, stored in the form of an electric charge
imbalance and capable of provoking electrons to flow through a
conductor, can be expressed as a term called voltage, which
technically is a measure of potential energy per unit charge of
electrons, or something a physicist would call specific potential
energy. Defined in the context of static electricity, voltage is
the measure of work required to move a unit charge from one location
to another, against the force which tries to keep electric charges
balanced. In the context of electrical power sources, voltage is the
amount of potential energy available (work to be done) per unit
charge, to move electrons through a conductor.
Because voltage is an expression of potential energy,
representing the possibility or potential for energy release as the
electrons move from one "level" to another, it is always referenced
between two points. Consider the water reservoir analogy:
Because of the difference in the height of the drop, there's
potential for much more energy to be released from the reservoir
through the piping to location 2 than to location 1. The principle
can be intuitively understood in dropping a rock: which results in a
more violent impact, a rock dropped from a height of one foot, or
the same rock dropped from a height of one mile? Obviously, the drop
of greater height results in greater energy released (a more violent
impact). We cannot assess the amount of stored energy in a water
reservoir simply by measuring the volume of water any more than we
can predict the severity of a falling rock's impact simply from
knowing the weight of the rock: in both cases we must also consider
how far these masses will drop from their initial height. The
amount of energy released by allowing a mass to drop is relative to
the distance between its starting and ending points.
Likewise, the potential energy available for moving electrons from
one point to another is relative to those two points. Therefore,
voltage is always expressed as a quantity between two points.
Interestingly enough, the analogy of a mass potentially "dropping"
from one height to another is such an apt model that voltage between
two points is sometimes called a voltage drop.
Voltage can be generated by means other than rubbing certain
types of materials against each other. Chemical reactions, radiant
energy, and the influence of magnetism on conductors are a few ways
in which voltage may be produced. Respective examples of these three
sources of voltage are batteries, solar cells, and generators (such
as the "alternator" unit under the hood of your automobile). For
now, we won't go into detail as to how each of these voltage sources
works -- more important is that we understand how voltage sources
can be applied to create electron flow in a circuit.
Let's take the symbol for a chemical battery and build a circuit
step by step:
Any source of voltage, including batteries, have two points for
electrical contact. In this case, we have point 1 and point 2 in the
above diagram. The horizontal lines of varying length indicate that
this is a battery, and they further indicate the direction which
this battery's voltage will try to push electrons through a circuit.
The fact that the horizontal lines in the battery symbol appear
separated (and thus unable to serve as a path for electrons to move)
is no cause for concern: in real life, those horizontal lines
represent metallic plates immersed in a liquid or semi-solid
material that not only conducts electrons, but also generates the
voltage to push them along by interacting with the plates.
Notice the little "+" and "-" signs to the immediate left of the
battery symbol. The negative (-) end of the battery is always the
end with the shortest dash, and the positive (+) end of the battery
is always the end with the longest dash. Since we have decided to
call electrons "negatively" charged (thanks, Ben!), the negative end
of a battery is that end which tries to push electrons out of it.
Likewise, the positive end is that end which tries to attract
electrons.
With the "+" and "-" ends of the battery not connected to
anything, there will be voltage between those two points, but there
will be no flow of electrons through the battery, because there is
no continuous path for the electrons to move.
The same principle holds true for the water reservoir and pump
analogy: without a return pipe back to the pond, stored energy in
the reservoir cannot be released in the form of water flow. Once the
reservoir is completely filled up, no flow can occur, no matter how
much pressure the pump may generate. There needs to be a complete
path (circuit) for water to flow from the pond, to the reservoir,
and back to the pond in order for continuous flow to occur.
We can provide such a path for the battery by connecting a piece
of wire from one end of the battery to the other. Forming a circuit
with a loop of wire, we will initiate a continuous flow of electrons
in a clockwise direction:
So long as the battery continues to produce voltage and the
continuity of the electrical path isn't broken, electrons will
continue to flow in the circuit. Following the metaphor of water
moving through a pipe, this continuous, uniform flow of electrons
through the circuit is called a current. So long as the
voltage source keeps "pushing" in the same direction, the electron
flow will continue to move in the same direction in the circuit.
This single-direction flow of electrons is called a Direct
Current, or DC. In the second volume of this book series,
electric circuits are explored where the direction of current
switches back and forth: Alternating Current, or AC. But for
now, we'll just concern ourselves with DC circuits.
Because electric current is composed of individual electrons
flowing in unison through a conductor by moving along and pushing on
the electrons ahead, just like marbles through a tube or water
through a pipe, the amount of flow throughout a single circuit will
be the same at any point. If we were to monitor a cross-section of
the wire in a single circuit, counting the electrons flowing by, we
would notice the exact same quantity per unit of time as in any
other part of the circuit, regardless of conductor length or
conductor diameter.
If we break the circuit's continuity at any point, the
electric current will cease in the entire loop, and the full voltage
produced by the battery will be manifested across the break, between
the wire ends that used to be connected:
Notice the "+" and "-" signs drawn at the ends of the break in
the circuit, and how they correspond to the "+" and "-" signs next
to the battery's terminals. These markers indicate the direction
that the voltage attempts to push electron flow, that potential
direction commonly referred to as polarity. Remember that
voltage is always relative between two points. Because of this fact,
the polarity of a voltage drop is also relative between two points:
whether a point in a circuit gets labeled with a "+" or a "-"
depends on the other point to which it is referenced. Take a look at
the following circuit, where each corner of the loop is marked with
a number for reference:
With the circuit's continuity broken between points 2 and 3, the
polarity of the voltage dropped between points 2 and 3 is "-" for
point 2 and "+" for point 3. The battery's polarity (1 "-" and 4
"+") is trying to push electrons through the loop clockwise from 1
to 2 to 3 to 4 and back to 1 again.
Now let's see what happens if we connect points 2 and 3 back
together again, but place a break in the circuit between points 3
and 4:
With the break between 3 and 4, the polarity of the voltage drop
between those two points is "+" for 4 and "-" for 3. Take special
note of the fact that point 3's "sign" is opposite of that in the
first example, where the break was between points 2 and 3 (where
point 3 was labeled "+"). It is impossible for us to say that point
3 in this circuit will always be either "+" or "-", because
polarity, like voltage itself, is not specific to a single point,
but is always relative between two points!
- REVIEW:
- Electrons can be motivated to flow through a conductor by a
the same force manifested in static electricity.
- Voltage is the measure of specific potential energy
(potential energy per unit charge) between two locations. In
layman's terms, it is the measure of "push" available to motivate
electrons.
- Voltage, as an expression of potential energy, is always
relative between two locations, or points. Sometimes it is called
a voltage "drop."
- When a voltage source is connected to a circuit, the voltage
will cause a uniform flow of electrons through that circuit called
a current.
- In a single (one loop) circuit, the amount current of current
at any point is the same as the amount of current at any other
point.
- If a circuit containing a voltage source is broken, the full
voltage of that source will appear across the points of the break.
- The +/- orientation a voltage drop is called the polarity.
It is also relative between two points.
Resistance
The circuit in the previous section is not a very practical one.
In fact, it can be quite dangerous to build (directly connecting the
poles of a voltage source together with a single piece of wire). The
reason it is dangerous is because the magnitude of electric current
may be very large in such a short circuit, and the release of
energy very dramatic (usually in the form of heat). Usually,
electric circuits are constructed in such a way as to make practical
use of that released energy, in as safe a manner as possible.
One practical and popular use of electric current is for the
operation of electric lighting. The simplest form of electric lamp
is a tiny metal "filament" inside of a clear glass bulb, which glows
white-hot ("incandesces") with heat energy when sufficient electric
current passes through it. Like the battery, it has two conductive
connection points, one for electrons to enter and the other for
electrons to exit.
Connected to a source of voltage, an electric lamp circuit looks
something like this:
As the electrons work their way through the thin metal filament
of the lamp, they encounter more opposition to motion than they
typically would in a thick piece of wire. This opposition to
electric current depends on the type of material, its
cross-sectional area, and its temperature. It is technically known
as resistance. (It can be said that conductors have low
resistance and insulators have very high resistance.) This
resistance serves to limit the amount of current through the circuit
with a given amount of voltage supplied by the battery, as compared
with the "short circuit" where we had nothing but a wire joining one
end of the voltage source (battery) to the other.
When electrons move against the opposition of resistance,
"friction" is generated. Just like mechanical friction, the friction
produced by electrons flowing against a resistance manifests itself
in the form of heat. The concentrated resistance of a lamp's
filament results in a relatively large amount of heat energy
dissipated at that filament. This heat energy is enough to cause the
filament to glow white-hot, producing light, whereas the wires
connecting the lamp to the battery (which have much lower
resistance) hardly even get warm while conducting the same amount of
current.
As in the case of the short circuit, if the continuity of the
circuit is broken at any point, electron flow stops throughout the
entire circuit. With a lamp in place, this means that it will stop
glowing:
As before, with no flow of electrons, the entire potential
(voltage) of the battery is available across the break, waiting for
the opportunity of a connection to bridge across that break and
permit electron flow again. This condition is known as an open
circuit, where a break in the continuity of the circuit prevents
current throughout. All it takes is a single break in continuity to
"open" a circuit. Once any breaks have been connected once again and
the continuity of the circuit re-established, it is known as a
closed circuit.
What we see here is the basis for switching lamps on and off by
remote switches. Because any break in a circuit's continuity results
in current stopping throughout the entire circuit, we can use a
device designed to intentionally break that continuity (called a
switch), mounted at any convenient location that we can run
wires to, to control the flow of electrons in the circuit:
This is how a switch mounted on the wall of a house can control a
lamp that is mounted down a long hallway, or even in another room,
far away from the switch. The switch itself is constructed of a pair
of conductive contacts (usually made of some kind of metal) forced
together by a mechanical lever actuator or pushbutton. When the
contacts touch each other, electrons are able to flow from one to
the other and the circuit's continuity is established; when the
contacts are separated, electron flow from one to the other is
prevented by the insulation of the air between, and the circuit's
continuity is broken.
Perhaps the best kind of switch to show for illustration of the
basic principle is the "knife" switch:
A knife switch is nothing more than a conductive lever, free to
pivot on a hinge, coming into physical contact with one or more
stationary contact points which are also conductive. The switch
shown in the above illustration is constructed on a porcelain base
(an excellent insulating material), using copper (an excellent
conductor) for the "blade" and contact points. The handle is plastic
to insulate the operator's hand from the conductive blade of the
switch when opening or closing it.
Here is another type of knife switch, with two stationary
contacts instead of one:
The particular knife switch shown here has one "blade" but two
stationary contacts, meaning that it can make or break more than one
circuit. For now this is not terribly important to be aware of, just
the basic concept of what a switch is and how it works.
Knife switches are great for illustrating the basic principle of
how a switch works, but they present distinct safety problems when
used in high-power electric circuits. The exposed conductors in a
knife switch make accidental contact with the circuit a distinct
possibility, and any sparking that may occur between the moving
blade and the stationary contact is free to ignite any nearby
flammable materials. Most modern switch designs have their moving
conductors and contact points sealed inside an insulating case in
order to mitigate these hazards. A photograph of a few modern switch
types show how the switching mechanisms are much more concealed than
with the knife design:
In keeping with the "open" and "closed" terminology of circuits,
a switch that is making contact from one connection terminal to the
other (example: a knife switch with the blade fully touching the
stationary contact point) provides continuity for electrons to flow
through, and is called a closed switch. Conversely, a switch
that is breaking continuity (example: a knife switch with the blade
not touching the stationary contact point) won't allow
electrons to pass through and is called an open switch. This
terminology is often confusing to the new student of electronics,
because the words "open" and "closed" are commonly understood in the
context of a door, where "open" is equated with free passage and
"closed" with blockage. With electrical switches, these terms have
opposite meaning: "open" means no flow while "closed" means free
passage of electrons.
- REVIEW:
- Resistance is the measure of opposition to electric
current.
- A short circuit is an electric circuit offering little
or no resistance to the flow of electrons. Short circuits are
dangerous with high voltage power sources because the high
currents encountered can cause large amounts of heat energy to be
released.
- An open circuit is one where the continuity has been
broken by an interruption in the path for electrons to flow.
- A closed circuit is one that is complete, with good
continuity throughout.
- A device designed to open or close a circuit under controlled
conditions is called a switch.
- The terms "open" and "closed" refer to switches
as well as entire circuits. An open switch is one without
continuity: electrons cannot flow through it. A closed switch is
one that provides a direct (low resistance) path for electrons to
flow through.
Voltage and current in a practical circuit
Because it takes energy to force electrons to flow against the
opposition of a resistance, there will be voltage manifested (or
"dropped") between any points in a circuit with resistance between
them. It is important to note that although the amount of current
(the quantity of electrons moving past a given point every second)
is uniform in a simple circuit, the amount of voltage (potential
energy per unit charge) between different sets of points in a single
circuit may vary considerably:
Take this circuit as an example. If we label four points in this
circuit with the numbers 1, 2, 3, and 4, we will find that the
amount of current conducted through the wire between points 1 and 2
is exactly the same as the amount of current conducted through the
lamp (between points 2 and 3). This same quantity of current passes
through the wire between points 3 and 4, and through the battery
(between points 1 and 4).
However, we will find the voltage appearing between any two of
these points to be directly proportional to the resistance within
the conductive path between those two points, given that the amount
of current along any part of the circuit's path is the same (which,
for this simple circuit, it is). In a normal lamp circuit, the
resistance of a lamp will be much greater than the resistance of the
connecting wires, so we should expect to see a substantial amount of
voltage between points 2 and 3, with very little between points 1
and 2, or between 3 and 4. The voltage between points 1 and 4, of
course, will be the full amount of "force" offered by the battery,
which will be only slightly greater than the voltage across the lamp
(between points 2 and 3).
This, again, is analogous to the water reservoir system:
Between points 2 and 3, where the falling water is releasing
energy at the water-wheel, there is a difference of pressure between
the two points, reflecting the opposition to the flow of water
through the water-wheel. From point 1 to point 2, or from point 3 to
point 4, where water is flowing freely through reservoirs with
little opposition, there is little or no difference of pressure (no
potential energy). However, the rate of water flow in this
continuous system is the same everywhere (assuming the water levels
in both pond and reservoir are unchanging): through the pump,
through the water-wheel, and through all the pipes. So it is with
simple electric circuits: the rate of electron flow is the same at
every point in the circuit, although voltages may differ between
different sets of points.
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."
Contributors
Contributors to this chapter are listed in chronological order of
their contributions, from most recent to first. See Appendix 2
(Contributor List) for dates and contact information.
Bill Heath (September 2002): Pointed out error in
illustration of carbon atom -- the nucleus was shown with seven
protons instead of six.
Ben Crowell, Ph.D. (January 13, 2001): suggestions on
improving the technical accuracy of voltage and charge
definitions.
Jason Starck (June 2000): HTML document formatting, which
led to a much better-looking second edition.
Lessons In Electric Circuits copyright (C) 2000-2002 Tony
R. Kuphaldt, under the terms and conditions of the
Design
Science License
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