Ohm'S Law, Energy, and Power
Ohm'S Law, Energy, and Power
CHAPTER 3
OHM’S LAW, ENERGY, AND POWER
BASIC PROBLEMS
2. (a) When the resistance doubles, the current is halved from 100 mA to 50 mA.
(b) When the resistance is reduced by 30%, the current increases from 100 mA to
I = V/0.7R = 1.429(V/R) = (1.429)(100 mA) 143 mA
(c) When the resistance is quadrupled, the current decreases from 100 mA to 25 mA.
3. Tripling the voltage triples the current from 10 mA to 30 mA, but doubling the resistance
halves the current to 15 mA.
V 50 V V 30 V
(c) I= = 0.5 A (d) I= = 2 mA
R 100 R 15 k
V 250 V
(e) I= = 53.2 A
R 4.7 M
V 9V V 5.5 V
5. (a) I= = 3.33 mA (b) I= = 550 A
R 2.7 k R 10 k
V 40 V V 1 kV
(c) I= = 588 A (d) I= = 500 mA
R 68 k R 2 k
V 66 kV
(e) I= = 6.60 mA
R 10 M
V 12 V
6. I= = 1.2 A
R 10
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V 25 V V 5V
7. (a) I= = 2.50 mA (b) I= = 2.27 A
R 10 k R 2.2 M
V 15 V
(c) I= = 8.33 mA
R 1.8 k
24 V
9. I= = 0.642 A
37.4 Ω
0.642 A is greater than 0.5 A, so the fuse will blow.
V 10 V V 90 V
14. (a) R= =5 (b) R= =2
I 2A I 45 A
V 50 V V 5.5 V
(c) R= = 10 (d) R= = 0.55
I 5A I 10 A
V 150 V
(e) R= = 300
I 0.5 A
V 10 kV V 7V
15. (a) R= = 2 k (b) R= = 3.5 k
I 5A I 2 mA
V 500 V V 50 V
(c) R= = 2 k (d) R= = 100 k
I 250 mA I 500 A
V 1 kV
(e) R= = 1 M
I 1 mA
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V 6V
16. R= = 3 k
I 2 mA
V 8V V 12 V
17. (a) R= =4 (b) R= = 3 k
I 2A I 4 mA
V 30 V
(c) R= = 0.2 M = 200 k
I 150 A
V 3.2 V
18. I= = = 0.82 A
R 3.9
W 26 J
19. P= = = 2.6 W
t 10 s
W 7500 J
21. P=
t 5h
7500 J 1 h 7500 J
= 0.417 J/s = 417 mW
5 h 3600s 18,000s
24. (a) 1 W = 1000 103 W = 1000 mW (b) 0.4 W = 400 103 W = 400 mW
(c) 0.002 W = 2 103 W = 2 mW (d) 0.0125 W = 12.5 103 W = 12.5 mW
26. (a) 1.5 kW = 1.5 103 W = 1500 W (b) 0.5 MW = 0.5 106 W = 500,000 W
(c) 350 mW = 350 103 W = 0.350 W (d) 9000 W = 9000 106 W = 0.009 W
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W
27. P in watts
t
W
V
Q
Q
I
t
W
P VI
t
So, (1 V)(1 A) = 1 W
W 1J
28. P =1W
t 1s
1000 J
1 kW = 1000 W =
1s
1 kW-second = 1000 J
1 kWh = 3600 1000 J
1 kWh = 3.6 106 J
V 2 (60 V)2
33. P= = 5.81 W
R 620
V 2 (1.5 V)2
34. P= = 0.0402 W = 40.2 mW
R 56
35. P = I2R
P 100 W
R= 2 = 25
I (2 A)2
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36. 5 106 watts for 1 minute = 5 103 kWmin
5 103 kWmin
= 83.3 kWh
60 min/1 hr
6700 W/s
37. = 0.00186 kWh
(1000 W/kW)(3600 s/h)
V 1.25 V
39. I = 0.125 A
RL 10
W
40. P=
t
156 mJ
156 mW =
1s
Wtot (156 mJ/s)(90 h)(3600 s/h) = 50,544 J
16
80 Ah
46. I= =8A
10 h
650 mAh
47. I= = 13.5 mA
48 h
ADVANCED PROBLEMS
52. Assume that the total consumption of the power supply is the input power plus the power lost.
POUT = 2 W
P
% efficiency = OUT 100%
PIN
POUT 2W
PIN = 100% 100% = 3.33 W
% efficiency 60%
The power supply itself uses
PIN POUT = 3.33 W 2 W = 1.33 W
Energy = W = Pt = (1.33 W)(24 h) = 31.9 Wh 0.032 kWh
V 120 V
53. Rf = = 150
I 0.8 A
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54. Measure the current with an ammeter connected as shown in Figure 3-1. Then calculate the
unknown resistance with the formula, R = 12 V/I.
Figure 3-1
0V 10 V
I1 = =0A I2 = = 100 mA
100 100
20 V 30 V
I3 = = 200 mA I4 = = 300 mA
100 100
40 V 50 V
I5 = = 400 mA I6 = = 500 mA
100 100
60 V 70 V
I7 = = 600 mA I8 = = 700 mA
100 100
80 V 90 V
I9 = = 800 mA I10 = = 900 mA
100 100
100 V
I11 = =1A
100
Figure 3-2
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VS 1V
56. R= = 200
I 5 mA
VS 1.5 V VS 2V
(a) I= = 7.5 mA (b) I= = 10 mA
R 200 R 200
VS 3V VS 4V
(c) I= = 15 mA (d) I= = 20 mA
R 200 R 200
VS 10 V
(e) I= = 50 mA
R 200
V 1V V 1V V 1V
57. R1 = = 0.5 R2 = =1 R3 = =2
I 2A I 1A I 0.5 A
V2 10 V
58.
30 mA 50 mA
(10 V)(30 mA)
V2 = = 6 V new value
50 mA
The voltage decreased by 4 V, from 10 V to 6 V.
59. The current increase is 50%, so the voltage increase must be the same; that is, the voltage must
be increased by (0.5)(20 V) = 10 V.
(10.4CM /ft)(24ft)
60. Wire resistance: RW = = 0.154
1624.3CM
V 6V
(a) I = 59.9 mA
R RW 100.154
(b) VR = (59.9 mA)(100 ) = 5.99 V
(c) VRW = 6 V 5.99 V = 0.01 V
0.01 V
For one length of wire, V = = 0.005 V
2
1500 kWh
62. = 48.39 kWh/day
31 days
48.39kWh/day
P = = 2.02 kW
24 h/day
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63. The minimum power rating you should use is 12 W so that the power dissipation does not
exceed the rating.
V 2 (12 V) 2
64. (a) P= = 14.4 W
R 10
(b) W = Pt = (14.4 W)(2 min)(1/60 h/min) = 0.48 Wh
(c) Neither, the power is the same because it is not time dependent.
66. The materials required for the Load Test Box are as follows:
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Figure 3-3
Troubleshootinhg
70. R is open.
71. No fault
72. R1 is shorted.
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