Unit 1: Basic Electricity Principles
Table of Contents
1. Voltage, Current, Resistance, and Power
Voltage (V)
Voltage (also called Electric Potential Difference) is the electrical "pressure" that pushes electric charge (current) through a circuit. It represents the work done per unit charge.
Unit: Volt (V).
Current (I)
Current is the rate of flow of electric charge. It is the amount of charge that passes a point in a given time.
Unit: Ampere (A).
Resistance (R)
Resistance is the opposition to the flow of electric current. It converts electrical energy into heat.
Unit: Ohm (Ω).
Power (P)
Electrical Power is the rate at which electrical energy is used or converted.
Formulas:
- P = V × I (Power = Voltage × Current)
- P = I² × R
- P = V² / R
Unit: Watt (W).
2. Ohm's Law
Ohm's Law states that the current (I) flowing through a conductor is directly proportional to the voltage (V) across it, assuming constant temperature.
Formula: V = I × R
This is the fundamental relationship between the three basic quantities.
3. Series, Parallel, and Series-Parallel Combinations
Resistances
- Series: Resistors are connected end-to-end.
- The current (I) is the same through all components.
- The total voltage (V) is the sum of individual voltages.
- Equivalent Resistance (Req): Req = R₁ + R₂ + ...
- Parallel: Resistors are connected across the same two points.
- The voltage (V) is the same across all components.
- The total current (I) is the sum of individual currents.
- Equivalent Resistance (Req): 1/Req = 1/R₁ + 1/R₂ + ...
- Series-Parallel: The circuit is a mix of both. To solve, you simplify the circuit step-by-step, combining the simple series or parallel sections first.
Voltages (Batteries)
- Series: Voltages add up. Connecting two 1.5V batteries in series (+ to -) gives 3.0V.
- Parallel: Voltages are the same. Connecting two 1.5V batteries in parallel (all + together, all - together) still gives 1.5V, but doubles the current capacity. (Warning: Only connect identical batteries in parallel).
4. KCL & KVL
These laws are used to analyze complex circuits where simple series/parallel rules don't apply.
Kirchhoff's Current Law (KCL)
Statement: The algebraic sum of all currents entering a junction (or node) is zero.
In simple terms: Σ Iin = Σ Iout
This is a statement of the conservation of charge.
Kirchhoff's Voltage Law (KVL)
Statement: The algebraic sum of all voltages (rises and drops) around any closed loop in a circuit is zero.
In simple terms: Σ Vrises (like batteries) = Σ Vdrops (like resistors)
This is a statement of the conservation of energy.
- If you trace a loop in the same direction as the current, the voltage change across a resistor is a *drop* (-IR).
- If you trace from the - to the + terminal of a battery, it's a *rise* (+V).
5. AC and DC Electricity
DC (Direct Current)
- Definition: The flow of electric charge is in one direction only.
- Source: Batteries, solar cells, DC generators.
- Waveform: A straight, flat line.
AC (Alternating Current)
- Definition: The flow of electric charge periodically reverses direction.
- Source: Power plant generators (alternators), household wall sockets.
- Waveform: A sine wave (sinusoidal).
6. Electrical Load and its Types
An electrical load is any device that consumes electrical power and converts it into another form of energy (heat, light, motion, etc.).
Types of Loads:
- Resistive Load:
- Converts electrical energy to heat.
- Current and voltage are in phase.
- Examples: Incandescent light bulbs, electric heaters, toasters.
- Inductive Load:
- Uses magnetic fields; stores energy in a magnetic field.
- Current lags voltage.
- Examples: Electric motors, fans, transformers, solenoids.
- Capacitive Load:
- Stores energy in an electric field.
- Current leads voltage.
- Examples: Capacitors, switching power supplies.
7. AC Terminology
Describing an AC sine wave:
[Image of a sine wave labeled with Amplitude, Period, and Cycle]- Amplitude: The maximum (peak) value of the voltage or current.
- Instantaneous Value: The value of the voltage or current at any specific moment in time.
- Cycle: One complete repetition of the AC waveform (one positive half and one negative half).
- Time Period (T): The time (in seconds) it takes to complete one full cycle.
- Frequency (f): The number of cycles completed per second (f = 1/T).
Unit: Hertz (Hz). Household electricity is typically 50 Hz or 60 Hz. - Phase Angle (φ): The angular position of the waveform (in degrees or radians) at a specific instant, often relative to t=0.
- Phase Difference: The angular offset between two different AC waveforms (e.g., the phase difference between voltage and current).