Electric Circuits
Download
Report
Transcript Electric Circuits
Foundations of Physical
Science
Workshop: Electric Circuits
Electric Circuits
CPO Science
Key Questions
What “flow of understanding”
provides the necessary
foundation for an understanding
of electricity?
What kinds of electric circuits
can you build?
How does electricity behave?
Light the Bulb!
What needs to
happen to get
the bulb to
light?
Parts of our Circuits Kit
Wooden Board
Wires of various lengths
On/Off switches
Bulbs and holder
Resistors – fixed and variable
Build a simple Circuit
Place the bulb in a socket
Use one D cell
Make the bulb light!
Add a switch to conserve D cell energy
Use your finger to trace the path of
electricity from one terminal of the D
cell to the other terminal
Parts of a Circuit
Wire
Bulb
Battery
Switch
Symbols used for
Diagramming
Let’s build on this…
Add a second D cell to your circuit, right
next to the first. Be sure to match up
positive terminal with negative terminal
Do you notice any difference?
Add a second light bulb to the circuit,
keeping only one pathway for electricity
to follow
What do you observe now?
Series Circuit
Another way to light two
bulbs
Keep two D cells in the circuit
Wire up the 2 light bulbs so that
there are two branches or pathways
for electricity to follow
What differences do you observe?
Parallel Circuit
Can you explain why
the bulbs in a
parallel circuit are
brighter?
Water Analogy
Resistance and Current
Inverse Relationship
Voltage
The amount of
potential energy
that each unit of
charge has
Review
V = voltage, measured in volts
I = current, measured in
amperes, or amp
R = resistance, measured in
Ohms, symbol W
Using the Multimeter to measure
Voltage
Battery by itself
Battery in a circuit
Using the Multimeter to
measure Current
Current in a
circuit
Multimeter
completes the
circuit
Analyze Circuits
1 bulb
Total voltage
available
Voltage across
each bulb
Total current at
terminal
Current through
each bulb
2 bulbs in 2 bulbs in
series
parallel
Why are parallel bulbs brighter?
1 bulb
Total voltage
available
Voltage across
each bulb
Total current at
terminal
Current through
each bulb
2.8 V
2 bulbs in 2 bulbs in
series
parallel
2.8 V
2.8 V
2.8 V
1.4 V
2.8 V
.12 A
.10 A
0.24 A
.12 A
.10 A
0.12 A