Module P5: Electrical Circuits
P5.1 Electric current – a flow of what?
1. explain that when two objects are rubbed together they become
charged, because electrons
are transferred from one object to the other
2. recall that objects with similar charges repel, and objects with
opposite charges attract
3. explain simple electrostatic effects in terms of attraction and
repulsion of charges
4. recall that electrons are negatively charged
5. recall that electric current is a flow of charge
6. recall that electric current is measured in amperes
7. understand that in an electric circuit the metal conductors (the
components and wires)
contain many charges that are free to move
8. understand that when a circuit is made, the battery causes these
free charges to move, and
that they are not used up but flow in a continuous loop
9. recall that in metallic conductors an electric current is a movement
of free electrons that are
present throughout such materials
10. understand that in metal conductors there are lots of charges free
to move but in an insulator
there are few charges free to move.
11. describe how an ammeter should be connected in a circuit to measure
the flow of current at
a chosen point.
P5.2 What determines the size of the current in an electric circuit and
the energy it
transfers?
1. recall that the larger the voltage of the battery in a given
circuit, the bigger the current
2. recall that components (for example, resistors, lamps, motors)
resist the flow of charge
through them
3. recall that the larger the resistance in a given circuit, the
smaller the current will be
4. recall that the resistance of connecting wires is so small that it
can usually be ignored
5. understand that when electric charge flows through a component (or
device), work is
done by the power supply, and energy is transferred from it to the
component and/or its
surroundings
6. recall that power (in watts, W) is a measure of the rate at which an
electrical power supply
transfers energy to an appliance or device and/or its surroundings
7. use the equation:
power = voltage × current
(watts, W) (volts, V) (amperes, A)
8. recall that resistors get hotter when there is an electric current
through them, and
understand that this heating effect is caused by collisions between the
moving
charges and stationary ions in the wire
9. recall that this heating effect makes a lamp filament hot enough to
glow
10. describe how the resistance of an LDR varies with light intensity
11. describe how the resistance of a thermistor (ntc only) varies with
temperature
12. recognise and use the electrical symbols for a cell, power supply,
filament lamp, switch,
LDR, fixed and variable resistor, thermistor, ammeter and voltmeter
13. understand that two (or more) resistors in series have more
resistance than either one on its
own, because the battery has to move charges through both of them
14. understand that two (or more) resistors in parallel provide more
paths for charges to move
along than either resistor on its own, so the total resistance is less
15. use the equation:
resistance (ohms, Ω) = voltage (volts, V)
––––––––––––––
current
(amperes, A)
16. describe in words, or using a sketch graph, how the current through
a component varies with
voltage across it when the resistance stays constant.
P5.3 How do parallel and series circuits work?
1. describe how a voltmeter should be connected to measure the
potential difference between
any two chosen points
2. recall that the voltage across a battery (measured in V) provides a
measure of the ‘push’ of
the battery on the charges in the circuit
3. recall that potential difference is another term for voltage
4. relate the potential difference between two points in the circuit to
the work done on, or by, a
given amount of charge as it moves between these points
5. describe the effect on potential difference and current of adding
further identical batteries in
series and in parallel with an original single one
6. understand that when two (or more) components are connected in
series to a battery:
a. the current
through each component is the same
b. the potential
differences across the components add up to the potential difference
across the battery
(because the work done on each unit of charge by the battery
must equal the
work done by it on the circuit components)
c. the potential
difference is largest across the component with the greatest resistance,
because more work
is done by the charge moving through a large resistance
than through a
small one
d. a change in the
resistance of one component (variable resistor, LDR or
thermistor) will
result in a change in the potential differences across all the
components
7. understand that when several components are connected in parallel
directly to a battery:
a. the potential
difference across each component is equal to the potential
difference of the
battery
b. the current
through each component is the same as if it were the only
component present
c. the total
current from (and back to) the battery is the sum of the currents through
each of the
parallel components
d. the current is largest through the component with the smallest
resistance, because
the same battery voltage causes a larger current to flow through a
smaller
resistance than through a bigger one.
P5.4 How is mains electricity produced? How are voltages and currents
induced?
1. recall that mains electricity is produced by generators
2. recall that generators produce a voltage by a process called
electromagnetic induction
3. understand that when a magnet is moving into a coil of wire a
voltage is induced across the
ends of the coil
4. understand that if the magnet is moving out of the coil, or the
other pole of the magnet is
moving into it, there is a voltage induced in the opposite direction
5. understand that if the ends of the coil are connected to make a
closed circuit, a current will
flow round the circuit
6. understand that a changing magnetic field caused by changes in the
current in one coil of
wire can induce a voltage in a neighbouring coil
7. describe the construction of a transformer as two coils of wire
wound on an iron core
8. understand that a changing current in one coil of a transformer will
cause a changing
magnetic field in the iron core, which in turn will induce a changing
potential
difference across the other transformer coil
9. recall that a transformer can change the size of an alternating
voltage
10. use the equation:
voltage across primary coil number
of turns in primary coil
–––––––––––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––––––––––––
voltage across secondary coil = number of turns in secondary coil
11. describe how, in a generator, a magnet or electromagnet is rotated
within a coil of wire to
induce a voltage across the ends of the coil
12. understand that the size of this induced voltage can be increased
by:
a. increasing the
speed of rotation of the magnet or electromagnet
b. increasing the
strength of its magnetic field
c. increasing the
number of turns on the coil
d. placing an iron
core inside the coil
13. describe how the induced voltage across the coil of an a.c.
generator (and hence
the current in an external circuit) changes during each revolution of
the magnet or
electromagnet
14. understand that when the current is always in the same direction,
it is a direct current (d.c.),
e.g. the current from a battery
15. recall that mains electricity is an a.c. supply
16. understand that a.c. is used because it is easier to generate than
d.c., and is easier
and simpler to distribute over long distances
17. recall that the mains domestic supply in the UK is 230 volts.
P5.5 How do electric motors work?
1. understand that a current-carrying wire or coil can exert a force on
a permanent magnet, or
on another current-carrying wire or coil nearby
2. understand that a current-carrying wire, if placed in a magnetic
field whose lines of force are
at right-angles to the wire, experiences a force at right angles to
both the current direction
and the lines of force of the field
3. recall that a current-carrying wire that is parallel to the lines of
force of a magnetic field
experiences no force
4. explain how the motor effect can result in a turning force on a
rectangular current-carrying
coil placed in a uniform magnetic field
5. understand that the motor effect can be used to produce continuous
rotation of the coil, by
using a commutator to ensure that the direction of the current in the
coil is reversed at an
appropriate point in each revolution
6. explain the role and use of motors in devices including domestic
appliances, hard disc
drives, DVD players and electric motor vehicles.
© OCR 2011 GCSE Science A
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