Series and Parallel Circuit PDF
Series and Parallel Circuit PDF
PARALLEL
HOW WE WIRE THE WORLD
Series and parallel circuits
Learning Objectives:
Starter:
Match up the symbols with the words and pictures of
components.
• How many can you get right (we haven’t covered them all in class
yet!)?!?!
types of circuit
There are two types of electrical circuits;
• If one resistor breaks (a bulb goes out) the entire series is turned
off.
SERIES CIRCUIT - RESISTANCE
• Total resistance goes UP with each resistor since the current has must go
through each resistor.
• Given
– Vbattery = 12 V
– R1 = 50 Ω, R2 = 100 Ω, R3 = 100 Ω
• Complete the following table
V = I R
1
2
3
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T
PARALLEL CIRCUIT – PROS AND
CONS
Advantages
Problems
Parallel
• Most things are wired in parallel
• Because of the fact that the more you plug in, the
intensity doesn’t decrease.
• Of course, this also increases the risk of fire
• This is why homes have fuses or circuit breakers.
They turn off everything in the circuit when current
moves too fast.
TOLL BOOTH
• EXPLANATION
Adding toll booths in series increases
resistance and slows the current flow.
•Adding toll booths in parallel lowers
resistance and increases the current
flow.
Parallel Circuit - Resistance
• Resistors added side-by-side
• The more paths, the less TOTAL resistance.
1/ Req=1/R1+1/R2+1/R3
• Ex. 2 resistors in parallel with 4Ω each.
• Since the circuit offers two equal pathways
for charge flow, only 1/2 the charge
will choose to pass through a given branch.
PARALLEL CIRCUIT - CURRENT
• ALL paths are used!
• But the charge d iv id e s up into all branches
• One branch can have more current than another branch
(depends on resistance in branch).
• Given
– Vbattery = 12 V
– R1 = 50 Ω, R2 = 100 Ω, R3 = 100 Ω
• Complete the following table:
V = I R
1
2
3
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T
measuring current & voltage
a)
6V
4A A
V V
A
measuring current & voltage
b)
6V
4A A
V
A
answers
a) b)
6V
6V 4A 4A
6V
4A 4A
3V 3V 2A
4A 6V
2A
VOLTAGE, CURRENT, AND
POWER
• One Volt is a Joule per Coulomb (J/C)
• One Amp of current is one Coulomb per second (6.24 x10^18
electrons/second).
• If I have one volt (J/C) and one amp (C/s), then multiplying
gives Joules per second (J/s)
• this is power: J/s = Watts
• So the formula for electrical power is just:
• More work is done per unit time the higher the voltage and/or
P = VI: power = voltage × current
the higher the current
TWO TYPES OF
CURRENT
•DC—Direct Current
• produced by solar cells and chemical cells
(batteries)
• Current only flows in one direction.
•AC—Alternating Current
• Current flows back and forth (alternates)
• Found in homes
• Generators produce AC current
REFERENCE
• bhsd228.schoolwires.net
• https://education.jlab.org/jsat/powerpoint/0708_electricity.pp