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P5 Electricity in the home

P5.1 Alternating current

Question Answer
What is direct current (DC)? it is a current that flows in one direction only (DC)
Name a source of DC? a battery
What is alternating current (AC)? it is a current that repeatedly reverses direction
Name a source of AC? mains supply in the home
What does the potential difference do when there is a direct current? the potential difference in a direct current circuit does not change direction
What does the potential difference do when there is an alternating current? the polarity of the potential difference repeatedly reverses its direction
What type of current does mains supply? alternating current (AC)
What is the frequency of alternating current (AC)? it is number of cycles it passes through each second
What is a cycle? the current flows in one direction then in the other completing a cycle before it repeats itself again
What is the mains frequency in the UK? 50 cycles per second or 50 Hz
How long does a mains cycle take in the UK? time for a cycle = 1 ÷ frequency = 1 ÷ 50 = 0.02s
What is the maximum voltage of mains in the UK? around 325 volts
Name the wires in a mains circuit? a live and a neutral wire
What is the potential of the neutral wire? zero volts
What is the potential of the live wire? it alternates between positive and negative each cycle
Why is the live wire dangerous? because its potential repeatedly changes from positive to negative
What is the National Grid? a nationwide network of cables and transformers to distribute electricity across the country
What is the potential difference of a typical power station? an alternating potential of 25 000 V or 25 kV
Where are step-up transformers used in the National Grid? at power stations to transfer electricity to the National Grid
What does a step-up transformer do? it makes the size of the alternating potential much bigger typically either 25 000V or 132 000V
Where are step-down transformers used in the National Grid? they are used to supply electricity to consumers
What does a step-down transformer do? it makes the size of the alternating potential much smaller to 230 V for homes and 100kV or 33kV for businesses
Why is potential difference increased to distribute electricity around the country? it reduces the power loss because increasing the potential difference means only a small current is needed
Name the equipment used to show how an alternating potential difference varies with time. an oscilloscope

P5 Electricity in the home

P5.2 Cables and plugs

Question Answer
What does the earth wire do? it provides a path for a fault current to flow to earth to prevent users from a shock
Why must a metal heater be earthed?? In case, the electric wire touches the case, it stops the metal case becoming live and potentially shocking even electrocuting a user
Name a group of materials that make good insulators? plastics
What does it mean when an electrical device is double insulated? the appliance is designed in such a way that the electrical parts can never come into contact with the outer casing of the device
What are the outer casings of plugs, sockets, and cables made of? hard-wearing electrical insulators
Why are the outher casings of plugs, sockets, and casings made of hard-wearing electrical insulators/ because they all contain live wires
How are mains appliances connected to the mains? by a wall socket using a cable and a three-pin plug
What materials are sockets made of? a stiff plastic
What wires does a wall socket have? a live wire, a neutral wire, and an earth wire
What is the earth wire connected to? to the ground in the home of the socket
What is the voltage of the earth wire? zero volts, 0 V
What current does the earth wire carry? it only carries a current if there is a fault
Which pin of a three-pin plug is connected to the earth wire? the longest pin
Why does a plug have three pins? to connect to the live wire, neutral wire, and earth wire
What metal are pins in a plug made of? brass
Why are the pins in a plug made of brass? because brass is a good conductor and does not oxidise or rust
What metal conducts better than brass? copper
Why is copper not used instead of brass? because brass is harder than copper
What type of material is used for the plug case? an insulator
What is the layout of the inside of a plug designed to do? to ensure that the wires and the pins can't touch each other when the plug is sealed
How is the live pin connected to the live wire? via a fuse
Why is the live pin connected to the live wire via a fuse? if too much current passes into the live wire the fuse will melt and cut the live wire off
What is the colour of the live wire? brown
What is the colour of the neutral wire? blue
What is the colour of the neutral wire? green and yellow striped
What metal is used for cables? copper
How are the wires in cables insulated? the copper wire is surrounded by an outer layer of rubber or flexible plastic
When is a two core cable? a cable that contains two copper wires each insulated with plastic
When are two core cables used? for appliances with plastic cases like radios, hairdryers, and mobile phone charges
Which cables are thicker out of the wires that join the sockets in a house compared to the cables that join together light fittings? the cables joining house sockets are much thicker than those joining light fittings
Why are the cables joining house sockets much thicker than those joining light fittings? because the cables joining house sockets carry more current than those joining light fittings
Why are the cables that carry more current thicker? so they have less resistance which reduces the heating effect
What is a short circuit? when a live wire touches a neutral wire
What happens when there is a short circuit? a large current flows very quickly which can damage or destroy electrical devices, or even start electrical fires
How does a fuse protect appliances against a short circuit? the large current that results from a short circuit melts the wire in the fuse which then cuts the current off
Why is it dangerous to touch a live wire? • people's bodies are at zero volts
• touching a live wire will result in a large potential difference across the body
• the large potential difference will cause a current to flow through the person
• the person will suffer an electric shock, possibly a lethal shock

P5 Electricity in the home

P5.3 Electrical power and potential difference

Question Answer
What does the current through an electrical appliance do? it transfers energy from the power source to the appliance
What is the power of an appliance? the energy it transfers per second
What are the units of power? Watts (W)
State the equation for power. \( power\; (P)\; (watts,\; W)= \frac {energy\; transferred,\; E\; (joules,\; J)}{time,\; t\; (seconds,\; s)} \)
Rearrange the equation for energy. E = Pt
Describe the energy in an artificial heart. • millions of electrons pass through the circuit of an artificial heart every second
• work is done by a battery in the artificial heart to force the electrons around the circuit
• each electron transfers a small amount of energy to the heart from the battery
• the total energy transferred to the artificial heart each second is large enough to allow the appliance to function
What is the current through an electrical appliance? the charge which flows through it each second
What is the potential difference across an electrical appliance? the energy transferred to the appliance by each coulomb of charge that passes through it
What is the power supplied to an electrical appliance? it is the energy supplied to the appliance by the current each second
State the equation for power in an electrical appliance. \( power,\; (P) = {current,\; I\; } \times {potential\; difference,\; V} \)
How do you determine the right fuse for an appliance? the power rating of the appliance divided by its potential difference
What is the effect of a current passing through a resistor? the power supplied to it by the current heats the resistor
What happens to the heat in the resistor when a current passes through it? the heat is dissipated to the surroundings
State the formula for the potential difference V across a resistor of resistance R with a current I through it. V = I x R
State the formula for the power P dissipated by a resistor R when current I passes through it. P = V x I
State the other version of the equation for power in a resistor. P = I2R
What happens to the power dissipated by a resistor if the current is doubled? the power is quadrupled

P5 Electricity in the home

P5.4 Electrical currents and energy transfer

Question Answer
What is a current? the flow of charge
Name two charged particles. electrons and protons
What makes a charge move to create a current? potential difference (also known as voltage) makes charge move to create a current
What are charges make up the current in wires attached to electrical appliances? electrons
State the equation for calculating the charge flow in a current charge flow, Q = current, I x time, t
State the units for each quantity in the above equation. • charge: Coloumbs, C
• current: Amperes, A
• time: seconds, s
What is the role of the battery in making a current flow through a resistor? the battery does work to make electrons pass through the resistor
Why does a resistor become hotter when a current passes through it? • the electrons moving through the resistor collide with the ions and molecules of the resistor
• the ions and molecules of the resistor gain kinetic energy as a result of each collission
• the ions and molecules thus vibrate more and the resitor becomes hotter
Decribe the changes in energy from battery to a warm resistor. • the chemical energy of the battery is transferred to the kinetic energy of the charged particles in the current
• the kinetic energy of the charged particles in the current is transferred to the ions and molecules of the resistor
• the increased kinetic energy of ions and molecules is manifested as heat energy
State the equation to calculate the energy transferred to a resistor. energy, E = charge flow, Q x potential difference, V
energy, E = power, P x time, t = potential difference, V x current, I x time, t
Describe the energy transfer in a series circuit with a resistor, battery and light bulb. • the charge leaves the battery with energy
• the charge transfers some of its energy to the light bulb
• the charge transfers some of its energy to the resister
• the energy transferred to the light bulb is converted to light and heat
• the energy transferred to the resistor is converted to heat
• the heat energy of the light bulb and the resistor is transferred to the surroundings
• the electrical work done by the battery is equal to the energy transferred to the light bulb and the resistor
Write an equation for the energy in the above circuit. the energy from the battery = the energy transferred to the light bulb + the energy transferred to the resistor

P5 Electricity in the home

P5.5 Appliances and efficiency

Question Answer
How can one work out how much energy is supplied to an appliance by the mains? the time the appliance has been switched on and the power of the appliance
State the equation for the energy transferred to an appliance in a given time. energy transferred from the mains, E = power, P × time, t
State the units for energy, power and time • energy Joules J
• power Watts, W
• time seconds, s
State the equation to calculate the power supplied to an appliance. power, P = current, I × potential difference, V
State the units for power, current and potential difference • power Watts, W
• current Amperes, A
• potential difference Volts V
State the formula for efficiency for an electrical appliance. efficiency = (output power) ÷ (input power) × 100
Rearrange the efficiency equation for output power. output power = efficiency × (input power) x
What are the units of efficiency? efficiency is expressed either as a ratio or a percentage
What is the maximum efficiency of an appliance as a percentage? 100 %
What is the equation to calcuate the wasted energy percentage of an appliance. wasted energy = 100 % − percentage efficiency
List the ways an electrical appliance wastes energy. • the heating effect of the current due to the resistance in the wires
• the heating effect of the current due to the components in the appliance
• the heating effect due to friction of moving parts like motors

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