User:Inconspicuum/Physics (A Level)/Electricity Questions
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Charge
[edit | edit source]- How much charge do 1234 electrons carry?
- How many electrons does it take to carry 5 C of charge?
- The total charge on 1 mole of electrons (6 x 1023 particles) is equal to 1 Faraday of charge. How many coulombs of charge are equal to 1 Faraday?
- The mass of a ball is 50 mg. It is supplied 5 C of charge. Will there be any change in the mass of the ball? If so, calculate the change of the mass.
Current
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- 10 coulombs flow past a point in a wire in 1 minute. How much current is flowing through the point?
- How long does it take for a 2A current to carry 5C?
- In the diagram on the left, I = 9A, and I1 = 4.5A. What is the current at I2?
- What would I equal if I1 = 10A and I2 = 15A?
- In the diagram on the left, in 5 seconds, 5C of charged particles flow past I1, and 6.7C flow past I2. How long does it take for 10C to flow past I?
Voltage
[edit | edit source]- A battery has an EMF of 5V. What is the total potential difference across all the components in the circuit?
- The voltages (relative to the voltage of the battery) on either side of a resistor are -6V and -5V. What is the potential difference across the resistor?
- At a given point in a circuit, 5C of charge have 10 kJ of potential energy. What is the voltage at this point?
- Why do the electrons move to a point 1cm further along the wire?
Power
[edit | edit source]- The potential difference across a 9W light bulb is 240V. How much current is flowing through the light bulb?
- How much energy is dissipated by a 10W component in 1 hour?
- The potential difference across a top-notch kettle, which can hold up to 1 litre of water, is 240V, and the current is 12.5 A. 4.2 kJ of energy is required to raise the temperature of 1kg of water by 1°C. Assuming 100% efficiency and that the temperature has to be raised 80°C (20°C to 100°C), how long does it take to boil 1 litre of water?
- How much energy is dissipated by a 100Ω resistor in 10 seconds if 2A of current are flowing?
- The charge on an electron is -1.6 x 10-19 C. How long does it take for a mole (6 x 1023 particles) of electrons to flow through a 40W light bulb on a 240V ring main?
Resistance and Conductance
[edit | edit source]- The potential difference across a resistor is 4V, and the current is 10A. What is the resistance of the resistor?
- What is the conductance of this resistor?
- A conductor has a conductance of 2S, and the potential difference across it is 0.5V. How much current is flowing through it?
- A graph is drawn of potential difference across an Ohmic conductor, and current. For every 3cm across, the graph rises by 2cm. What is the conductance of the conductor?
- On another graph of potential difference and current, the graph curves so that the gradient increases as current increases. What can you say about the resistor?
- 3 resistors, wired in series, have resistances of 1kΩ, 5kΩ and 500Ω each. What is the total resistance across all three resistors?
- 2 conductors, wired in parallel, have conductances of 10S and 5S. What is the total resistance of both branches of the parallel circuit?
- The circuit above is attached in series to 1 10Ω resistor. What is the total conductance of the circuit now?
Internal Resistance
[edit | edit source]- A 9V battery is short-circuited. The potential difference across the battery is found to be 8V, and the current is 5A. What is the internal resistance of the battery?
- What is the EMF of the battery in the following circuit?
- What is the internal resistance of the battery in the following circuit?
Potential Dividers
[edit | edit source]- A 12 kΩ resistor and a 20 kΩ resistor are connected to a 9V battery. A voltmeter is connected across the 12kΩ resistor. What is the reading on the voltmeter? (Assume negligible internal resistance.)
- A potential divider consists of 100 5Ω resistors, with a wiper which moves on one resistor for every 3.6° a handle connected to it turns. The wiper is connected to a voltmeter, and the circuit is powered by a 120V power source with negligible internal resistance. What is the reading on the voltmeter when the handle turns 120°?
- A 9V battery with internal resistance 0.8Ω is connected to 3 resistors with conductances of 3, 2 and 1 Siemens. A voltmeter is connected across the 3 and 2 Siemens resistors. An ammeter is placed in the circuit, between the battery and the first terminal of the voltmeter, and reads 2A. What is the reading on the voltmeter?
Sensors
[edit | edit source]An LDR's resistance decreases from a maximum resistance of 2kΩ to a minimum resistance of 0Ω as light intensity increases. It is used in a distance sensing system which consists of a 9V power supply, a 1.6 kΩ resistor, the LDR and a multimeter which displays voltage to 2 decimal places measuring the potential difference across one of the two resistors.
- Across which resistor should the multimeter be connected in order to ensure that, as the distance from the light source to the sensor increases, the potential difference recorded increases?
- In complete darkness, what voltage is recorded on the multimeter?
- When a light source moves 0.5m away from the sensor, the voltage on the multimeter increases by 2V. What is the sensitivity of the sensing system when using this light source, in V m-1?
- When the same light source is placed 0m from the sensor, the potential difference is 0V. When the light source is 1m away, what voltage is displayed on the multimeter?
- What is the resolution of the sensing system?
- Draw a circuit diagram showing a similar sensing system to this, using a Wheatstone bridge and amplifier to improve the sensitivity of the system.
- What is the maximum potential difference that can reach the amplifier using this new system (ignore the amplification)?
- If this signal were to be amplified 3 times, would it exceed the maximum voltage of the system? What would the limits on the signal be?
Resistivity and Conductivity
[edit | edit source]- A material has a conductivity of 106 S m-1. What is its resistivity?
- A pure copper wire has a radius of 0.5mm, a resistance of 1 MΩ, and is 4680 km long. What is the resistivity of copper?
- Gold has a conductivity of 45 MS m-1. What is the resistance of a 0.01m across gold connector, 0.05m long?
- A strand of metal is stretched to twice its original length. What is its new resistance? State your assumptions.
- Which has the greater resistivity: a plank or a piece of sawdust, made from the same wood?
Semiconductors
[edit | edit source]1. What is the resistivity of silicon, at room temperature?
- What sort of variable resistor would a semiconductor be useful in?
- If positive ions are added to silicon (doping it), how does its conductivity change?