Basic Electrical Ideas and Units PDF
Basic Electrical Ideas and Units PDF
AND UNITS
Electron Theory of Electricity
i (ampere)
t ( seconds)
The shaded area represents the number of coulombs
q xtransferred in t x sec
Example:
Brief History
One of the fundamental relationships of circuit
theory is that between voltage, current and
resistance
This relationship and the properties of resistance
were investigated by the German physicist Georg
Simon Ohm
Ohm found that current depended on both voltage
and resistance.
From his investigation he was able to define the
resistance of a wire and show that the current was
inversely proportional to this resistance
Resistance of Conductors
resistance of a material depends upon several
factors:
- type of material
- length of the conductor
- cross-sectional area
- temperature
theresistance of a conductor is dependent
upon the type of material
the resistance of a metallic conductor is
directly proportional to the length of the
conductor
the resistance of a metallic conductor is
inversely proportional to the cross-
sectional area of the conductor
Factors governing the resistance of a conductor
at a given temperature may be expressed
mathematically:
l
R
A
Where: = resistivity
l = length
A = cross-sectional area
Notes:
is the constant of proportionality called
resistivity
o Resistivity has a unit of -m if the length is in
meter and area is in meter square, and a unit of
CM-ohms/ ft if the length is in feet and the area
is in CM
Since most conductor are circular,
cross-sectional
d
2
area
d 2
A r2
2 4
units of cross-sectional area of a conductor:
- square meter
- sq ft.
- Circular Mil (CM)
- Square-Mil (sq.mil)
Circular-Mil (CM)
As 2
A (1mil ) 2
4
1sq.mil CM
If s = 0.001 inch
A (0.001inch) 2
A 1x106 in 2
4
CM x no. of sq mils
sq. mils x no.of CM
4
For a wire with a diameter of N mils (N =
any positive number)
d2 N2
A sq. mils
4 4
4
substituting CM 1 sq mil, we have
N2 N2 4
A sq.mils ( )( CM ) N 2CM
4 4
Since d = N, the area in circular mils is simply equal
to the diameter in mils square, that is,
ACM (dmils ) 2
Volume to Resistance
R
V A
A
V
R 2
A
V
If A=
L
L
R
V
L
2
L
R
V
Resistivity of Common Elements and Alloy @ 200C
R2 R1 1 1 (t2 t1 )
where:1 temperature coefficient of t1
Examples: