Producing Electric Current
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Transcript Producing Electric Current
Alternating and Direct Current
Direct Current (DC) is the one way flow of electrical
charge from a positive to a negative charge.
Batteries produce direct current.
Direct Current is different than alternating current because
the charge only flows in one direction.
Alternating Current (AC) is when charges flow
back and forth from a source.
It is the way we receive our electricity (for our houses,
businesses, etc.)
The purpose of transformers is to convert AC voltages.
Transformers are extremely important to AC current,
and our life.
From Mechanical to Electrical
Energy
A magnet can produce an electric current Moving a loop of wire through a magnetic field
causes electric current to flow in the wire
Moving a magnet through a loop of wire has the
same effect
How can a magnet produce a current in a wire?
Due to the motion of the wire or magnet is converted
to electrical energy
Electromagnetic induction &
Generators
Electromagnetic Induction
Producing an electric current by moving a loop of wire
through a magnetic field or moving a magnet through a
wire loop
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uoQelu7XRjk
Generators
Machines that produce electric current by rotating a coil
of wire in a magnetic field
Wire coil is wrapped around an iron core and placed
between the poles of a permanent magnet.
Generators
Coil is rotated by an outside source of mechanical energy
Examples: Steam, wind, water
As the coil turns in the magnetic field, electric current flows
through the wire
When the coil turns so that the ends move past opposite ends of
the magnet:
The current reverses direction
The current changes direction twice with each revolution
A generator that is used in a car is known as an alternator
Electric Generators
Electricity in the home comes from a power plant
with huge generators
When the coil is fixed and the magnet rotates, the
current is the same as if the coil rotates and the
magnet is fixed.
Construction of a generator in a power plant
Electromagnets contain coils of wire wrapped around
iron cores
Rotating magnets connect to a turbine
Turbine: large wheel that rotates due to
Brain POP
Sources of electricity: http://www.teachersdomain.org/resources/phy03/sci/phys/energy/energysource/index.html
Direct and Alternating Currents
Compare and contrast current in batteries and
generators:
Compare: Both devices move electrons through the wire
Contrast: Batteries have DC. Generators have AC.
DC- Direct Current- Flows in only one direction.
AC- Alternating current- reverses the direction of
current flow regularly.
In N America, generators produce alternating
current at a frequency of 60 cycles per second, or
60 Hz
A 60-Hz alternating current changes direction 120
times per second
http://phet.colorado.edu/en/simulation/generator
http://www.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/phy03.sci.
phys.energy.hooverelec/hoover-dam-andhydroelectric-power/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AfGRBFdw2_g
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IwdtXGAtgvE#t=
59 Harnessing Waves?