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  • -Documents
    • 555 Timer Modes Explained -- The Learning Circuit 66
    • 555 Timer Project -- The Learning Circuit 67
    • 555 Timers - How a One Shot Timer Works -- The Learning Circuit 71
    • 555 Timers - How Bistable Mode Works -- The Learning Circuit 70
    • ADC LED Volume Meter with Arduino Uno -- The Learning Circuit 94
    • Add an LCD to Your Arduino Project Part 1 -- The Learning Circuit 19
    • Add an LCD to Your Arduino Project Part 2 -- The Learning Circuit 20
    • Arduino Starter Kit: Spaceship Interference -- The Learning Circuit 12
    • Basic Soldering Tools -- The Learning Circuit 06
    • Basic Tools & Wire -- The Learning Circuit 04
    • Bonus Content: Extended Version: Electronic To-Do List using Hall Effect Sensors
    • Building Circuit Blocks -- The Learning Circuit 10
    • Capacitor Substitution Box! -- The Learning Circuit 30
    • Circuit Basics with Cardboard Circuits -- The Learning Circuit 01
    • Circuit Symbols & Diagrams -- The Learning Circuit 33
    • Combinational Logic Devices -- The Learning Circuit 52
    • Community Feedback: Revisiting Resistors -- The Learning Circuit 37
    • Diode Logic Light Box -- The Learning Circuit 24
    • DIY AC Waveform Function Generator Kit -- The Learning Circuit 92
    • DIY Desktop Fume Fan -- The Learning Circuit 18
    • DIY Electromagnet -- The Learning Circuit 36
    • DIY Laser Light Show -- The Learning Circuit 26
    • DIY Laser Trip Wire Alarm -- The Learning Circuit 84
    • DIY Motion Activated Snow Globe -- The Learning Circuit 82
    • Dollar Store Challenge - Spikey Ornament
    • Dollar Store Project Parts
    • Edge Lit Signs -- The Learning Circuit 09
    • Electricity & Magnetism -- The Learning Circuit 35
    • Electronic Dice Kit -- The Learning Circuit 49
    • Electronic To-Do List using Hall Effect Sensors -- The Learning Circuit 90
    • Holiday Break Electronics Ideas (ya know, for kids!) -- The Learning Circuit Announcement
    • How 555 Timers Work -- The Learning Circuit 62
    • How Accelerometers Work -- The Learning Circuit 79
    • How Capacitors Work -- The Learning Circuit 29
    • How Decade Counters Work -- The Learning Circuit 73
    • How Diodes Work -- The Learning Circuit 23
    • How Do ADCs Work? -- The Learning Circuit 93
    • How Do DACs Work? -- The Learning Circuit 95
    • How Do Hall Effect Sensors Work? -- The Learning Circuit 89
    • How Do Transformers Work? -- The Learning Circuit 97
    • How Do Ultrasonic Distance Sensors Work? -- The Learning Circuit 85
    • How Does Alternating Current Work? -- The Learning Circuit 91
    • How FETs Function -- The Learning Circuit 31
    • How Flip Flops Work -- The Learning Circuit 60
    • How Laser Diodes Work -- The Learning Circuit 83
    • How Logic Gates Work -- The Learning Circuit 50
    • How Op Amps Work -- The Learning Circuit 68
    • How PIR Motion Sensors Work -- The Learning Circuit 81
    • How Shift Registers Work -- The Learning Circuit 75
    • How Thermistors Work -- The Learning Circuit 87
    • How Three-Way Switch Circuits Work -- The Learning Circuit 45
    • How to Add Multiple Inputs to an Arduino using a Shift Register -- The Learning Circuit 78
    • How to Add Outputs to an Arduino Using a Shift Register -- The Learning Circuit 77
    • How to Drive a 7-segment Display -- The Learning Circuit 53
    • How to Generate a Clock Signal with a 555 Timer -- The Learning Circuit 72
    • How to Make a 4-bit Shift Register Circuit -- The Learning Circuit 76
    • How to Make an Ultrasonic Nervous Robot -- The Learning Circuit 86
    • How to Make Chase Lights with a Decade Counter -- The Learning Circuit 74
    • How Transistors Work -- The Learning Circuit 27
    • In-depth on Inductors with KEMET -- The Learning Circuit 64
    • In-depth On Inductors with KEMET Part 2 -- The Learning Circuit 65
    • Inductor Project: Battery Juicer -- The Learning Circuit 39
    • Inductors and Solenoids -- The Learning Circuit 38
    • Infinity Mirror Beating Heart with Thermistors -- The Learning Circuit 88
    • Intro to Arduino -- The Learning Circuit 11
    • Intro to DC Motors -- The Learning Circuit 41
    • Intro to Integrated Circuits -- The Learning Circuit 48
    • Introducing Microphones and Speakers -- The Learning Circuit 46
    • It's Electrifying!: Holiday Ornament Ideas
    • Learn to Solder -- The Learning Circuit 07
    • Learning About Polymer Capacitors -- The Learning Circuit 40
    • LED Dominos Using a 555 Timer -- The Learning Circuit 63
    • Make A Baby Robot With The BBC micro:bit -- The Learning Circuit 80
    • Make a Resistor Substitution Box -- The Learning Circuit 22
    • Make Your Own Candy Thief Alarm -- The Learning Circuit 28
    • Make Your Own Thermometer! -- The Learning Circuit 15
    • Making a 12 bit DAC Using an Arduino -- The Learning Circuit 96
    • Making a Circuit from a Schematic -- The Learning Circuit 34
    • Making a FET Phase Light -- The Learning Circuit 32
    • Making Logic Gates From Discrete Components -- The Learning Circuit 51
    • micro:bit Add-on ZIP Halo LED Ring -- The Learning Circuit 58
    • micro:bit DIY Compass -- The Learning Circuit 57
    • micro:bit LED Array -- The Learning Circuit 54
    • micro:bit Onboard Accelerometer -- The Learning Circuit 55
    • micro:bit Touch Inputs -- The Learning Circuit 56
    • Ohm's Law with Breadboard Circuits -- The Learning Circuit 05
    • OpAmps Project: Build an Amplified Stereo Mic Kit -- The Learning Circuit 69
    • Reading Resistor Chart Values -- The Learning Circuit 21
    • Replacing MLCCs with Polymer Capacitors -- The Learning Circuit 42
    • Resistors -- The Learning Circuit 17
    • Series & Parallel Circuits -- The Learning Circuit 02
    • Soldering A Voice Changer Kit -- The Learning Circuit 47
    • Switches -- The Learning Circuit 13
    • Switches: Poles, Throws & Relays -- The Learning Circuit 44
    • Temperature Activated Fan! -- The Learning Circuit 16
    • The Science of Electricity -- The Learning Circuit 08
    • Toggle Sign Using an SR Flip-Flop -- The Learning Circuit 61
    • Transformers in Action: Tesla Coils -- The Learning Circuit 98
    • Types of Diodes -- The Learning Circuit 25
    • Using the Access:bit with the micro:bit -- The Learning Circuit 59
    • Wigglebots -- The Learning Circuit 03
    • Wire Maze Game -- The Learning Circuit 14
    • Zelda Korok Mask with DC Motors -- The Learning Circuit 43

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The Learning Circuit 08: The Science of Electricity

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element14's The Ben Heck Show

Join Karen as she shares her enthusiasm for teaching STEM subjects, gives you what you need to know to get started on electronics projects, and more.

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Karen breaks down the science of how electricity works.  She’ll go over Coulomb’s law of electrostatic forces, use magnets to help visualize how polarity works, and break down how polarity works on an atomic level in an electrical circuit. She discusses electric current, voltage, and polarity and how it applies to a battery in a simple circuit.

 

 

We use electricity everyday in our homes. Devices plugged into the wall are powered by AC electricity.  Handheld devices like our smart phones are powered by DC electricity. Electricity for our devices comes from outlets in our walls and from batteries but how does that work?  How does electricity get from one point to another? To explain how electricity works, Karen starts with the most basic parts. Everything, all matter, is made up of atoms. Atoms are made up of particles consisting of protons and neutrons in the core, surrounded by electrons.  In an atom, protons are positively charged, while electronics are equally negatively charged.  Atoms normally contain the same number of protons and electrons.  If this is the case, these atoms are electrically neutral, having no charge.  However, this can be changed. An atom can gain or lose an electron by passing it to or from another atom.  This causes an atom to become an ion, meaning it has extra or is missing electrons.  If an ion has extra electrons it is negatively charged, while an ion with missing electrons is positively charged.  Charged ions exert force on each other.

You can look at Coulomb’s law of electrostatic forces to understand how these charges interact.  Coulombs’s law states that unlike charges attract each other whereas like charges repel each other.  Karen demonstrates this in action by using magnets.  The poles of magnets have opposing forces.  The opposing forces of the north and south poles of magnets interact the same way as the opposing forces of positive and negative ions. Coulomb’s law of electrostatic forces states that the force (F) of attraction or repulsion exerted between two charged bodies is directly proportional to the product of their charges (Q) and inversely proportional to the square of the distance (S) between them.  This means that two charged objects will repel or attract more or less proportionally to the amount of charge they have.  More charge, means a stronger charge, while less charge is a weaker force.  Once again, Karen uses magnets as a visual to understand this relationship. Karen has poured in some iron oxide power, a finer version of iron filament, into a bottle of baby oil.  The iron is attracted to the magnet. Placing the magnet to the side of the bottle allows you to see the size of the magnetic field.  The pull of the magnet is only strong enough to pull iron in at a close distance within this field.  You can also see how strength factors in, by comparing the strength of different types of magnets to the amount of charge in an atom.

Karen demonstrates how neodymium or rare earth magnets are stronger than ceramic magnets.  The rare earth magnets are only a quarter of the size of the ceramic magnets but are more than twice as strong.  They simply have more charge.  Less charge means weaker force while more charge means stronger force.  Unlike magnets, in electrical circuits, the distances are at the atomic level so you can’t even see them.  Atoms become ions when electrons pass form one atom to another.  This passing of electrons is called electric current.  Because of the way electrons are structured in an atom, electrons flow from one atom to another more easily in some substances than in others.  Substances in which electrons flow easily are called conductors while substances in which electrons do not flow easily are called insulators.

The amount of work needed for an electron to travel from one point to another is called potential energy or electric potential.  The difference in electric potential between two points is called voltage.  It’s also referred to as voltage drop, voltage difference, electromotive force, or EMF. Like magnets, batteries also have polarity. The electric potential between its positive pole and its negative pole, how much and how long the electrons will continue to flow, is the voltage of the battery. Because a circuit needs to have opposing charges to cause electrons to flow, you need to introduce something that has a polarity of an electric field. While you can use magnets to visualize how electrical polarity works, it doesn’t actually cause electrons to flow, therefore it doesn’t generate an electric current.  A battery has electrical polarity.  If you introduce a battery to circuit with an LED, the positive and negative poles of the battery will cause electrons to flow through the LED. The energy from the electrons flowing is what causes the LED to light up. That energy is the potential energy between the positive and negative ends of the battery and is measured in voltage.

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