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Electricity Class 10 Notes For Quick Revision

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23 views9 pages

Electricity Class 10 Notes For Quick Revision

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Electricity Class 10 Notes for Quick

Revision
Charge(Q):-
Electric charge is the basic physical property of matter that causes it to experience a force
when kept in an electric or magnetic field.
It can be positive or negative.
S.I. unit – Coulomb (C)

Quantisation of Charge:-
Every charge is an integral multiple of a basic charge i.e., charge on an electron(e–).
Q=ne
Number of electrons(n) = Q/e
Charge on an electron (1e–) =1.6 x 10-19 C

Electric Current and Circuit

1. If the electric charge flows through a conductor, we say that there is an


electric current in the conductor.
2. Electric current is expressed by the amount of charge flowing through a
particular area in unit time. In other words, it is the rate of flow of electric
charges.
3. Conventionally, in an electric circuit, the direction of electric current is
taken as opposite to the direction of the flow of electrons, which are
negative charges.

A continuous and closed path of an electric current is called an electric circuit.

If, Charge = Q, time = t, current = I, then

I = Q/t

SI unit of Electric Charge: coulomb (C)

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
1 C ≈ 6 x 1018 electrons

1 electron = 1.6 x 10-19 C charge

SI unit of Electric Current: ampere (A)

One ampere is constituted by the flow of one coulomb of charge per second.

Smaller quantities of current are expressed in milliamperes (mA) or in


microamperes (μA)

1mA = 10-3 A

1μA = 10-6 A

Ammeter:

An instrument called an ammeter measures electric current in a circuit.

It is always connected in series in a circuit through which the current is to be


measured.

Schematic Diagram of an Electric Circuit:

A schematic diagram of an electric circuit comprising - a cell, electric bulb,


ammeter, and plug key

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
Note that the electric current flows in the circuit from the positive terminal
of the cell to the negative terminal of the cell through the bulb and
ammeter.

Electric Potential and Potential Difference

The work done to move a unit charge from one point to the other is called the
potential difference between two points.

V = W/Q

SI unit of Electric Potential Difference: volt (V)

One volt is the potential difference between two points in a current carrying
conductor when 1 joule of work is done to move a charge of 1 coulomb from
one point to the other.

Voltmeter:

The potential difference is measured by means of an instrument called the


voltmeter.

The voltmeter is always connected in parallel across the points between which
the potential difference is to be measured.

Voltmeter Ammeter

i. It is used to measure the potential difference across i. It is used to measure electric current
two points in an electric circuit. in an electric circuit.

ii. Its resistance is very high. ii. Its resistance is very low.

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
iii. It is connected in series in an
iii. It is connected in parallel in an electric circuit.
electric circuit.

Circuit Diagram

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
Ohm's Law
Ohm’s Law: Potential difference across the two points of a metallic conductor is directly
proportional to the current passing through the circuit provided that temperature remains
constant.
Mathematical expression of Ohm’s Law:
V∝I
⇒ V = IR
R is a constant called resistance for a given metal.
V-I graph for Ohm’s Law:

Resistance: It is the property of a conductor to resist the flow of charges through it.
Its SI unit is ohm (Ω).
1 ohm: If the potential difference across the two ends of a conductor is 1 V and the current
through it is 1 A, then the resistance R, of the conductor is 1 Ω.

Good Conductor A component of a given size that offers a low resistance is a good conductor.

Resistor A conductor having some appreciable resistance is called a resistor.

Poor Conductor A component of identical size that offers a higher resistance is a poor conductor.

Insulator An insulator of the same size offers even higher resistance.

Factors on which the Resistance of a Conductor Depends


Resistance of a uniform metallic conductor is:
1. Directly proportional to the length of the conductor (l).
2. Inversely proportional to the area of cross-section (A).
3. Directly proportional to the temperature.

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
4. Depend on the nature of the material (ρ).
R = ρl/A

Resistivity:
1. ρ (rho) is called the electrical resistivity of the material.
2. Its SI unit is Ω m.
3. It is a characteristic property of the material.
4. The metals and alloys have very low resistivity in the range of 10–8 Ω m to 10–6 Ω
m. They are good conductors of electricity.
5. Insulators like rubber and glass have resistivity of the order of 1012 to 1017 Ω m.
6. Both the resistance and resistivity of a material vary with temperature.
7. The resistivity of an alloy is generally higher than that of its constituent metals.
8. Alloys do not oxidise (burn) readily at high temperatures. For this reason, they are
commonly used in electrical heating devices, like electric iron, toasters etc.
9. Tungsten is used almost exclusively for filaments of electric bulbs.
10. Copper and aluminium are generally used for electrical transmission lines.

Resistance of a System of Resistors

1. Resistors in Series

1. In a series combination of resistors the current is the same in every part of the circuit
or the same current through each resistor.
2. The total potential difference across a combination of resistors in series is equal to the
sum of potential difference across the individual resistors.

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
3. V = V1 + V2 + V3
4. Equivalent resistance (Rs) of three resistors in series (R1, R2, and R3) = Sum of R1,
R2, and R3
5. Rs = R1 + R2 + R3

2. Resistors in Parallel

1. The total current I, is equal to the sum of the separate currents through each branch of
the combination.
2. I = I1 + I2 + I3
3. Potential difference is same across each resistor.
4. Equivalent resistance of three resistors in parallel (R1, R2, and R3) = Rp
5. 1/Rp = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3

Advantages of parallel combination over series combination:


1. If one appliance stops working or goes out of order, then all other appliances keep on
working.
2. All appliances can be operated at the same voltage as the electric supply.
3. Different appliances have different requirements of current. This cannot be satisfied in
series as the current remains the same in series.
4. The total resistance in a parallel circuit is decreased.
5. All devices can be operated independently with separate switches.
6. Heating Effect of Electric Current
7. W (work done/hear/electrical energy) = QV = VIt = I2Rt = V2t/R
8. Joule's law of heating: The law implies that heat produced in a resistor is
9. directly proportional to the square of current for a given resistance,
10. directly proportional to resistance for a given current,

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
11. directly proportional to the time for which the current flows through the resistor.
12. Practical Applications of Heating Effect of Electric Current
13. The electric laundry iron, electric toaster, electric oven, electric kettle and electric
heater are some of the familiar devices based on Joule’s heating.

Electric Bulb:
The electric heating is also used to produce light, as in an electric bulb.
A strong metal with high melting point such as tungsten (melting point 3380°C) is used for
making bulb filaments.
The bulbs are usually filled with chemically inactive nitrogen and argon gases to prolong the
life of filament.

Fuse:
It protects circuits and appliances by stopping the flow of any unduly high electric current.
The fuse is placed in series with the device.
If a current larger than the specified value flows through the circuit, the temperature of the
fuse wire increases. This melts the fuse wire and breaks the circuit.
For an electric iron that consumes 1 kW electric power when operated at 220 V, a current of
(1000/220) A, that is, 4.54 A will flow in the circuit. In this case, a 5 A fuse must be used.

Electric Power
The rate at which electric energy is dissipated or consumed in an electric circuit is called
electric power.
P = VI = I2R (use this formula in series connection) = V2/R (use this formula in parallel
connection)
The SI unit of electric power is watt (W).
1 W is the power consumed by a device that carries 1 A of current when operated at a
potential difference of 1 V.
The commercial unit of electric energy is kilowatt hour (kW h), commonly known as ‘unit’.
1kWh = 1000 Wh = 1000 x 60 x 60 Ws = 3600000 ws = 3.6 x 106 joule

Electric Power:-
The amount of electrical energy consumed per unit time in an electric circuit is known as
electric power.

GARGEE CHAUDHARI
P = W/t
Or, P = VQ/t
Or, P = VI = I2R = V2/R
S.I. unit of power:- Watt(W)
1 Watt:- Electric power of an appliance is said to be 1 W if 1 A of current flows through it and
the potential difference across its ends is 1 V.
Heating Effect of Electric Current:-
W = VQ =VIt
or H = VIt = I2Rt

Joule’s Law of Heating:-


According to Joule’s law of heating, heat produced in a resistor is directly proportional to
square of current (H ∝ I2)
resistance (H ∝ R)
time for which current flows (H ∝ t)
H = I2Rt
S.I. unit of energy:- Joule(J)
Commercial unit of energy:- kilowatt hour(kW h)

Practical Applications of Heating Effect of Electric Current:-


Appliances based on heating effect of electric current are electric bulb, electric iron, electric
toaster, electric oven, electric kettle, electric heater, fuse etc.
Tungsten is used as the filament of the electric bulb.
The bulbs are filled with chemically inactive gases like nitrogen and argon to prolong the life
of the filament.
Conversion of Commercial Unit of Energy to S.I. Unit:-
1 kW h = 1000 W x 3600 s = 3.6 x 106 Ws = 3.6 x 106 J
1 unit = 1 kW h = 3.6 x 106

GARGEE CHAUDHARI

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