1 / 25

High Resistance to Evil, Low Resistance to Good

High Resistance to Evil, Low Resistance to Good. James 4:7  7 Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Alma 61:14

devaki
Download Presentation

High Resistance to Evil, Low Resistance to Good

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. High Resistance to Evil, Low Resistance to Good James 4:7  7 Submit yourselves therefore to God. Resist the devil, and he will flee from you. Alma 61:14   14 Therefore, my beloved brother, Moroni, let us resist evil, and whatsoever evil we cannot resist with our words, yea, such as rebellions and dissensions, let us resist them with our swords, that we may retain our freedom, that we may rejoice in the great privilege of our church, and in the cause of our Redeemer and our God. Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  2. Lecture 4 – Resistance & Ohm’s Law Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  3. Resistance • Resistance (R): opposition to the flow of current • Magnitude depends on electrical properties of the material • All circuit elements exhibit some resistance • May be undesirable • Causes electric energy to be transformed into heat • Element symbols: Ohm (Ω): electric resistance unit. 1 Ohm = 1 Volt/Ampere (V/A) Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  4. Conductance • Conductance (G): the inverse of resistance siemens (S): electric conductance unit. 1 siemens = 1 Ampere/Volt (A/V) Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  5. i + v _ R l A Resistance • Resistivity (ρ): a materials property which determines resistance • Conductivity (σ): the inverse of resistivity (determines conductance) Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  6. b4 b3 b2 b1 Resistance • Common resistors are made of cylindrical sections of carbon (resistivity ρ = 3.5x10-5Ω-m) Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  7. Resistance Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  8. b4 b3 b2 b1 Resistance • Example 1: what is the value of the resistor? Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  9. b4 b3 b2 b1 Resistance • Example 1: what is the value of the resistor? Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  10. b4 b3 b2 b1 Resistance • Example 2: what resistor has a value of 6.2M Ω? Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  11. b4 b3 b2 b1 Resistance • Example 2: what resistor has a value of 6.2M Ω? Blue Green Red Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  12. i + v _ R 1/R Ohm’s Law • The voltage across an element is directly proportional to the current flow through it OR Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  13. Ohm’s Law • Ohm’s law is only a simplification • Ohm’s law is not applicable: • At high voltages or currents • At high frequencies • Over long distances • For some materials For our class Ohm’s law will apply! Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  14. Ohm’s Law • Ohm’s Law only applies to a portion of an electrical element’s the i–v graph Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  15. Ohm’s Law • Example3: What is the resistance of the element with the following i–v characteristic? Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  16. Ohm’s Law • Example3: What is the resistance of the element with the following i–v characteristic? 1/R Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  17. Power Rating • power rating: maximum allowable power dissipation • Common power rating is ¼ W • Exceeding the power rating for an electrical element will cause the element to burn up! • Always consider power ratings!! Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  18. i + R1 – Vs2 1.5V + + _ _ Vs1 Vs – + i + R2 – 1.5V 1.5V Power Rating • Example4: With a ¼ W rating, what is the minimum resistor size (R) that can be used in the following: Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  19. i + R1 – Vs2 1.5V + + _ _ Vs1 Vs – + i + R2 – 1.5V 1.5V Power Rating • Example4: With a ¼ W rating, what is the minimum resistor size (R) that can be used in the following: Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  20. i + R1 – Vs2 1.5V + + _ _ Vs1 Vs – + i + R2 – 1.5V 1.5V Power Rating • Example4: With a ¼ W rating, what is the minimum resistor size (R) that can be used in the following: NB: Doubling the amount of voltage has a quadratic effect on minimum resistor size Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  21. is i1 i3 i2 + R3 – + R2 – + R1 – + _ Vs Power Rating • Example5: find the power supplied by the battery • Vs= 3V, i1 = 0.2mA, i2 = 0.4mA, i3 = 1.2mA Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  22. is i1 i3 i2 + R3 – + R2 – + R1 – + _ Vs Power Rating • Example5: find the power supplied by the battery • Vs= 3V, i1 = 0.2mA, i2 = 0.4mA, i3 = 1.2mA Node a Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  23. is i1 i3 i2 + R3 – + R2 – + R1 – + _ Vs Power Rating • Example6: find the voltages and resistances of R1, R2, R3 • Vs= 3V, i1 = 0.2mA, i2 = 0.4mA, i3 = 1.2mA Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  24. is i1 i3 i2 + R3 – + R2 – + R1 – + _ Vs Power Rating • Example6: find the voltages and resistances of R1, R2, R3 • Vs= 3V, i1 = 0.2mA, i2 = 0.4mA, i3 = 1.2mA Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

  25. is i1 i3 i2 + R3 – + R2 – + R1 – + _ Vs Power Rating • Example6: find the voltages and resistances of R1, R2, R3 • Vs= 3V, i1 = 0.2mA, i2 = 0.4mA, i3 = 1.2mA Discussion #4 – Ohm’s Law

More Related