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20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits p730 - 735

20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

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20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits. p730 - 735. Essential Questions. How does the wiring in a circuit change its ability to supply power to devices? How do we represent physical circuit elements in schematic drawings?. Objective(s ): We will be able to…. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuitsp730 - 735

Page 2: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Essential Questions

How does the wiring in a circuit change its ability to supply power to devices?

How do we represent physical circuit elements in schematic drawings?

Page 3: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Objective(s): We will be able to…

Interpret and construct circuit diagrams. Identify circuits as open or closed. Deduce the potential difference across the

circuit load, given the potential difference across the battery’s terminals.

Page 4: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Agenda:

Warm-Up Recap what happened on Friday. Reminder: Chapter 19 Test Tomorrow. Introduction to Circuit Diagrams Notes:

Schematic Diagrams Circuits and short circuits EMFs

Page 5: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Warm Up

The following drawings are used in circuit diagrams. List what you think each object represents.

• Wire

• Resistor

• Light Bulb

• Plug

• Battery/DC Source

• Switch

• Capacitor

Page 6: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagrams

A diagram that is used to represent the construction of an electrical apparatus is a schematic diagram. Sometimes called a circuit diagram.

They are used to determine how parts in an electrical device are arranged, and to help understand how they work.

Page 7: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagram Symbols

Wire or conductor

Page 8: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagram Symbols

Resistor or circuit load (Overall resistance. Discussed more in a minute.)

Page 9: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagram Symbols

Bulb or lamp

Page 10: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagram Symbols

Plug

Page 11: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagram Symbols

Battery

Page 12: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagram Symbols

Switch

Page 13: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Schematic Diagram Symbols

Capacitor

Page 14: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Electric Circuits

An electric circuit is a pathway through which charges can be conducted.

Circuits (and switches) must be closed to complete the pathway, otherwise charges will not flow. Light switch on.

Open circuits conduct no electricity. Light switch off.

Page 15: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Electrical Circuits

All circuits consist of two things… A source of potential difference

(electrical energy), like a battery, and…

A load: an element or group of elements in a circuit that dissipates energy.

Page 16: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Light Bulbs

Light bulbs themselves are a complete circuit with a resistor.

The filament acts as a resistor, converting electrical energy into internal energy and thus heat and light.

Page 17: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Short Circuits

Without a load (bulb or resistor), a circuit has very little resistance. And therefore, very high current. This is called a short circuit.

Most wires overheat when they short circuit (think of the battery and the paperclip). DANGEROUS!

This is why we have fuses and circuit breakers.

Page 18: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Electromotive Force (emf)

Literally, the force that moves electrons. Any device that increases the flow of charge in

a circuit is a source of emf, the energy per unit charge supplied by the source.

In real life, the terminal voltage (actual potential difference from the battery) is less than its emf due to internal resistance. The amount of power the battery actually

supplies is less than what it should, because some of the energy is wasted internally.

Page 19: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Terminal Voltage

The potential difference across a load equals the terminal voltage.

Meaning: if a battery supplies 1.5 volts of potential difference,

then the voltage across the resistor, bulb, or collection of resistors and bulbs etc. is 1.5 volts.

No energy created or destroyed.

Page 20: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Recap

Circuit diagrams are used to represent and analyze the composition of electric devices.

Open circuits do not have a complete pathway, so they do not conduct electricity. Closed circuits complete the pathway, so they do conduct electricity.

The voltage across the load of a circuit is the same as the voltage supplied by the battery.

Page 21: 20.1 Schematic Diagrams and Circuits

Homework

Tonight: Finish study guide. Due Wed: p 735 #1-5