Transcript SI units
ECE 101
Exploring Electrical Engineering
Chapter 2
Terms and Formulae
Herbert G. Mayer, PSU
Status 2/2/2016
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Syllabus
SI
What is . . . ?
Passive Sign Convention
Electric Sources
References
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SI
SI is the abbreviation from French name: Le Système
International d'Unités
Standards published in 1960 as the result of an
initiative started in 1948; they are based on the
meter-kilogram-second (MKS) system
SI is formally declared to be evolving, so some will
change, but if so, then per international agreement
change: kilogram, Ampere, Kelvin, mole
Replace by specifying via: Planck-, Boltzman-, and
Avogadro-constants
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SI
Replace by specifying via constants that can be
reproduced in a good lab
No need to measure temperature, gravity, air
pressure, etc. at some location, which might make
measurement location-dependent; i.e.:
Reason for change is technological evolution,
allowing more and more precise definitions
The corresponding American organization is NIST:
National Institute for Standard and Technology
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SI 7 Base Units
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SI Units
m: meter – is length of light traveled in
1/299,792,458th of a second
kg: kilogram – equal reference prototype; will likely
change
s: second – duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of
radiation corresponding to the transition between
the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of
cesium 133 atom
A: ampere – current which in 2 parallel conductors 1
meter apart in vacuum produces a force of 2 * 10-7
newton per meter of conductor
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SI Units
K: Kelvin – thermodynamic temperature unit that is
the 1/273.16 fraction of water temperature at triple
point
mol: mole – is amount of substance of a system
which contains as many elementary entities as there
are atoms in 0.012 kilogram of carbon 12; entities
can be atoms, molecules, electrons
Old definition: the mole is the amount of substance
that contains 6.022,141,79 x 1023 specified
elementary entities
cd: candela – is luminous intensity of a source that
emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 *
1012 hertz, plus some further constraints
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Changes Coming
Per 2011 declaration, the kilogram, the ampere,
the degree kelvin, and the mole, will be
redefined in terms of invariants of nature
New definitions will be based on fixed
numerical values of the Planck constant (h), the
elementary charge (e), the Boltzmann constant
(k), and Avogadro constant (NA), respectively
See [4]
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What is . . . ?
An electron? Subatomic particle with electric
charge; we call that charge negative; part of lepton
family
Called an elementary particle, since it seems to have
no sub-particles
Has mass of approx. 1/1836 of a proton
Yet electrons have properties of particles AND
waves
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What Is?
A coulomb? Is a fundamental unit of electrical
charge, and is also the SI derived unit of electric
charge; the symbol for Coulomb is C; the symbol
for charge flowing, creating a current, is: Q or q
A coulomb is equal to a charge of approximately
6.241×1018 electrons
Now what a charge really is, we don’t understand,
but we do know some key properties, and we can
measure it quite accurately
Similar to gravity: we can measure and use it, but
we don’t fundamentally understand what it is; we
only observe how it works
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What is?
An ampere? Unit of current. One of the base units of
the SI
Named after André Marie Ampère, French physicist
1775 – 1836
When about 6.241 * 1018 electrons stream though a
conductor in a second, the amount of charge moved
is 1 C and the current 1 A; AKA “amp”.
i = dq / dt
1A=1C/s
C here: Coulomb! Not capacitance
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What is?
A Volt is the SI unit of electrical force to push one
ampere of current against a one Ω resistance
Or the electric potential difference between 2 points
of a conductor when a current dissipates one watt
A Volt is AKA the potential difference between 2
planes that are 1 m apart with an electric field of 1
newton / coulomb
It is NOT one of the 7 base units on page 4!
In the mks system, the dimension is:
V = kg * m2 / ( A * s3 )
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What is?
A Volt is named named in honor of the Italian
physicist Alessandro Volta (1745-1827), inventor of
the first voltaic pile (chemical battery)
A Volt is Amperes times Ohm, Watts per Ampere, or
Joules per Coulomb:
V=A*Ω
V=W/A
V=J/C
V = dw / dq
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What is?
Electrical power, like its mechanical equivalent, is
the ability to do work
Is measured in Watt, unit dimension shown as W, in
equations sometimes denoted by letter p
Is the ability to do the work of a 1 Coulomb charge
every second, when passing through a field of 1 V
p=v*q/t=v*i
p = dW / dt = ( dW / dq ) * ( dq / dt ) = v * i
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What is?
Electrical resistance? A material’s opposition to the
free flow of electrons
In an insulator, such as vacuum or porcelain,
resistivity is very large, typically >> 1 MΩ (Mega
Ohm)
R ~ ki * length / Area
A
I
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What is?
Resistance Continued: In a conductor, such as
silver, carbon (graphene) or copper or gold,
resistivity is very small
Resistance is expressed in units of Ohm, symbol: Ω
Resistance grows proportional to the length l of
conducting material, and decreases inversely
proportional to the diameter A of the conductor; ki
being a material constant!
R~l/A
R = ki * l / A
ki
l
A
being a constant depending on material
being the length
being the diameter of the conducting material --not ampere!
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What is?
Electrical inductance? A charge in motion (e.g. some
current) creates a magnetic field around its conductor
If the current remains constant, so does the field
If current i varies over time, the magnetic field also
changes as a direct function. A time-varying magnetic
field induces a voltage in any conductor linked to the
field; linked meaning it is close-by
v ~ di / dt
v = L * di / dt
v
L
di
measured in Volt V
inductance in Henry H
the change in current A
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What is?
Electrical inductance and related power and energy?
p=i*v
p = i * L * di / dt
w=(L/2)*i2
w
p
L
i
di
the energy in Joule
the power measured in Watt
the inductance in Henry H
the current in A
the change of current over time, in A
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What is?
Electrical capacitance? Circuit parameter capacitance
is represented by the letter C, measured in farad F. A
capacitor does not directly conduct current, since an
insulator separates its 2 plates
But a charge placed onto one plate repels similarly
charged particles on the other plate, and so can
cause a charge to move; known as displacement
current. The current so created is proportional to the
rate at which the voltage across the plates varies
over time. Note: farad is a very large unit; thus in
diagrams we see smaller units, such as μF or nF.
i ~ dv / dt
i = C * dv / dt
i
the resulting current in A, caused by the changing voltage
C the capacitor’s capacitance, measured in farad
dv the change in voltage across the 2 plates
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What is?
A capacitor’s power p and energy w?
p=v*i
p = C * v * dv / dt
w = C * v2 / 2
w
p
i
C
dv
energy in Joule
power v measured in Watt
the displacement current, in A
is the capacitor’s capacitance, measured in farad
the change in voltage across the 2 plates
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Passive Sign Convention
Assigning a reference direction for current or
voltage in a circuit is arbitrary
Used consistently, any method works out fine
The most widely used method is the Passive Sign
Convention:
When the reference direction for the current in a
passive element is in the direction of the voltage
drop across that element, use a + sign in any
expression that relates current to voltage
Else use the - sign. That convention we call the
Passive Sign Convention
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Electric Sources
We use 4 types of electric sources:
1. Constant voltage sources
2. Constant current sources
3. Dependent voltage sources, and
Can depend on separate voltage
Other kinds depend on separate current
4. Dependent current sources
Can depend on separate voltage
Other kinds depend on separate current
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References
1. Electric Circuits, 10nd edition, Nilsson and Riedel,
Pearsons Publishers
2. SI Units from NIST:
http://physics.nist.gov/cuu/Units/units.html
3. NIST Special Publication 330, © 2008 Edition, by
Taylor and Thompson, lists the SI units
4. Peter Mohr, NIST Publication “Redefining the SI Base
Units”, November 2., 2011
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