Electricity and Magnetism
Electricity and Magnetism
Electricity and Magnetism
Magnetism
Source of magnetism
Magnetic field
Magnetic force
Electromagnetic Induction
Applications
Electric shock
Physiological effects
Bioelectricity
Cell potentials
Resting potential
Action Potential
Magnetism
Historical
Materials
Iron is one of a few materials
(also Nickel, Cobalt) that can be permanently
magnetised.
N S
N N
S
S
Magnets and magnetic force
A magnetic field
surrounds the
magnet.
N
Lines indicate direction
and magnitude of
magnetic field
S
Earth’s magnetic field pattern similar to
that of a bar magnet.
Source of magnetism
Permanent magnets are not the only items
with magnetic properties
Example:
When a current passes through a simple wire,
a magnetic field is created around the wire,
this is due to the flow of the electrons.
Atom
Orbiting Electrons
Electrons are moving around the nucleus,
electrons orbiting constitute a circular
current loop, (moving charge) so each
electron generates a tiny magnetic field
Spinning Electrons
Electrons also act as though they are spinning
about an axis through their centres.
Spinning electron also act like a current loop
and so creates a tiny magnetic field
domains
F I
S N S N
S N S N
F IL F =B*I*L
B is the magnetic field strength
B = F/IL (B perpendicular to I)
units of B are Newtons per metre per ampere
1T = 1N.m-1.A-1
Magnetic Induction
Moving charges (current) cause a magnetic field
S N
Iron
Orthodontics
Dental prostheses retention—jaw implant
Orthodontics
Magnets
alternative to elastics & wires
Magnetic Force
constant
Directional
Biologically safe
Magnet material
Biological safety ???
Medical uses of Magnetic fields MRI
Patient in strong magnetic field. Radio frequency
signal applied (reoriented the proton spin).
Absorption and re-emission measured and
computer image generated showing the types
of tissue present.
Non-invasive
imaging
technique that
discriminates
between body
tissues.
B = F/IL
30x10-6 N
Therefore L =F/BI =
10x10-3 T. 15x10-3 A
L = 2x10-1m = 0.2m = 20cm.
Electrical Shock
An electrical shock happens when one’s body
provides an “accidental” circuit completion
to “earth”.
A current then flows through the body, resulting
in tissue burn or muscle affect
Current disrupts central nervous system
Appliance
live
V~
neutral
metal
case
Ground
Nerves controlling muscles use electric currents
Muscles involuntarily contract in response
to external electric currents
“Can’t let go effect”
Essentially because contractor muscles which
close the hand are stronger than the extensor
muscles which are used to open it
Electrical Shock
Main factors and Physiological effects
earth
Path: >>>heart
Primary cause of death by electrical shock is
ventricular fibrillation
Humidity is important:
dry skin: 104-106 ohm, wet skin: 103 ohm
Duration:
lengthy breathing interruption is dangerous.
Page 278
Bioelectricity: Cell Potential
Electrical potential across cell boundaries:
Na+ K+
K+ Moles/m3 Na+
outside inside
Cl-
-ve ion concentration
A-
100
Cl-
A- (other negative ions)
Ionic concentration differences
Origin:
Cell membrane is semi-permeable: few ions
can go through (K+, Cl- in opposite directions)
Na+ 100 times less permeable.
Other ions—highly impermeable.
Direction, from high to low concentration.
Cell Potential Difference (2 states)
2 distinct states: ―resting‖ (inactive) and ―action‖
(responsible for communication and muscle
contraction)
Convention of polarity: inner relative to outer:
Nerve cell fires >>temporary reversal in
potential across cell membrane
Depolarisation
Cell contracts Repolarisation
Inaction -90mV Action Inaction
+
+__ + _ _
+50mV
_ _ -90mV
+ __ _ _ + _ ++ + _ + _+_ +
+ + + __ _ _ +
_ _ _ + _
_
+ _ ___ + _ _ _
+ + +
+ _ +++ _ + _ ___
+
_ _ _ + + +
Origin:
Nerve cell fires, cell membrane becomes 1000
times more permeable to Na+ than normal
(10 time more permeable than for K+ and Cl-
The influx of sodium depolarises the cell
, and the outflow of potassium repolarises
Action Potential
Voltage pulse
-nerve impulse
- action potential (AP)
In muscles—initiates contraction
Action Potential in Muscle
In a muscle, the Action Potential causes the
contraction of the muscle.
The Action Potential can be stimulated from
nerves on one side of the muscle and then
spread inside the muscle.
Coordinated action of many thousands of
muscle cells are involved
Large scale electrical activity easy to measure
- -
- -
- - +
- - +
+
+ ++ +
II + +
+ + III
Records
problems
Einthoven triangle with the
heart’s rhythm
LL
Question 7
The resting potential inside a muscle cell is
approximately -90mV and the potential outside is taken
to be 0V. If the average thickness of the cell membrane is
8 nanometres, determine the strength of the electric field
across the membrane.
E = V/d = (-90x10-3V)/(8x10-9m
E = -1.125x106V/m