mains electricity revise the following direct and alternating current 3-pin plugs and electrical...
TRANSCRIPT
Mains electricity
Revise the following
• Direct and alternating current• 3-pin plugs and electrical cable• Safety – fuses and earth wire• Period and frequency (Higher tier)• Calculating Power
What’s inside an electrical cable?
• An electrical cable contains three wires.• These wires are made of copper because it is a good conductor
of electricity• Each wire is made of thin strands of copper to keep the cable
flexible • Each wire is encased in plastic to stop the wires touching and
causing a short circuit• Plastic is used as it is a good insulator, as well as being tough
and flexible• The whole cable is encased in another layer of plastic
copper
insulating
plastic
What does each wire do?
The neutral wire (blue) completes the circuit. It is kept
at a zero voltage by the electricity company.
The earth wire (green and yellow) is a
safety wire that is needed to earth appliances with a metal case.
This makes it safer to touch the appliance if it
develops a fault.
The live wire (brown)carries a current that alternates
between a negative and positive voltage.
Safety using Fuses and EarthingFUSES
• A fuse contains a thin wire, which melts if the current is too high.
• This breaks the circuit and so electricity is unable to flow through the appliance.
• The appliance stops working and any danger has been averted.
• Fuses act as an early warning system, preventing appliances from being damaged by surges in electricity and warning owners of faults.
EARTHING
• Cables contains an earth wire to provide an alternative path for current if appliances develop faults.
• An earth wire is essential for an appliance with a metal case.
• If the live wire becomes loose and touches the metal case, a very large current flows to earth and blows the fuse, breaking the circuit
• When an appliance is working correctly, no electricity flows through the earth wire.
Frequency and period (Higher tier)
• We can use an oscilloscope to work out the frequency of the ac supply by measuring the period (time taken for one complete cycle)
• Frequency and period are connected by the equation:
Frequency (Hertz) = 1 . period (seconds)
Using oscilloscope traces to work out period and frequency
(0V)Zero voltage
Each division will have a potentialdifference (voltage)
valueThe 0 voltagerepresents the
Neutral terminal(stays at a
potential close to zero –
compared tothe Earth)
Time
Work out the frequency of the supply shown below?
Each time division =1 milliseconds
Period = 4 divisions x1 = 4ms
4 ms = 0.004 seconds
Frequency = 1/Period (seconds)
Frequency = 1/0.004
= 250Hz
• Electric current is the rate of flow of charge.• When an electrical charge flows through a resistor,
electrical energy is transformed into heat energy.• The rate at which energy is transformed in a
device is called the power.
Calculating Power
Power = current x potential difference(Watts/W)) (Amps) (Voltage/V))
energy = potential difference x charge transformed (Joules/J) (Voltage/V) (Coulombs/C)
charge = current x time(Coulomb/C) (Amps) (secs)