Heating Effect of Current
- When electricity passes through a component, such as a resistor, some of the electrical energy is turned into heat, therefore, increasing its temperature
- The heat that is produced will dissipate (spread out) into the environment via thermal conduction, convection and radiation
- When electricity passes through a component, there is energy transferred to heat
- This is due to collisions between:
- Electrons flowing in the conductor, and
- The lattice of atoms within the metal conductor
- Electricity, in metals, is caused by a flow of electrons
- This is called the current
- Metals are made up of a lattice of ions
- As the electrons pass through the metal lattice they collide with ions
- The ions resist the flow of the electrons
As electrons flow through the metal, they collide with ions, making them vibrate more
- When the electrons collide, they lose some energy by giving it to the ions, which start to vibrate more
- As a result of this, the metal heats up
- This is used to an advantage to generate heat for appliances such as electric hobs
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The heating effect of current can be used for many applications such as electric hobs
Power Dissipation
- When an electrical current does work against electrical resistance:
- Electrical energy is dissipated as thermal energy in the surroundings
- The heat that is produced will dissipate via thermal conduction, convection and radiation
- The amount of heat produced depends on two factors:
- Current: The greater the current, the more heat that is produced
- Resistance: The higher the resistance, the more heat that is produced (for a given current)
- Note that reducing the resistance can cause the current to increase
- This could actually increase the amount of heat produced
- In mechanics, power P is defined as the rate of doing work
- The potential difference is the work done per unit charge
- Current is the rate of flow of charge
- Therefore, the electrical power is defined as the rate of change of work done:
- The work done is the energy transferred so the power is the energy transferred per second in an electrical component
- The power dissipated (produced) by an electrical device can also be written as
- Using Ohm's Law V = IR to rearrange for either V or I and substituting into the power equation, means power can be written in terms of resistance R
- This means for a given resistor if the current or voltage doubles the power will be four times as great.
- Which equation to use will depend on whether the value of current or voltage has been given in the question
- Rearranging the energy and power equation, the energy can be written as:
E = VIt
- Where:
- E = energy transferred (J)
- V = voltage (V)
- I = current (A)
- t = time (s)
Worked Example
Two lamps are connected in series to a 150 V power supply.Which statement most accurately describes what happens?A. Both lamps light normally
B. The 15 V lamp blows
C. Only the 41 W lamp lightsD. Both lamps light at less than their normal brightness
ANSWER: A