Electrical Current
Electrical current definition
Electrical current is the flow rate of
electric charge in
electric field, usually in
electrical circuit.
Using water pipe analogy, we can visualize the electrical current
as water current that flows in a pipe.
The electrical current is measured in ampere (amp) unit.
Electrical current calculation
Electrical current is measured by the rate of electric charge
flow in an electrical circuit:
i(t) = dQ(t) / dt
The momentary current is given by the derivative of the electric
charge by time.
i(t) is the momentary current at time t in amps [A].
Q(t) is the momentary electric charge in coulombs [Q].
t is the time in seconds [s].
When the current is constant:
I = ΔQ /
Δt
I is the current in amps [A].
ΔQ is the electric
charge in coulombs [Q], that flows during time of Δt.
Δt is the time duration
in seconds [s].
Example
When 5 coulombs flow through a resistor for duration of 10 seconds,
the current will be calculated by:
I = ΔQ /
Δt = 5C / 10s = 0.5A
Current calculation with Ohm's law
IR = VR / R
Current direction
| current type |
from |
to |
| Positive charges |
+ |
- |
| Negative charges |
- |
+ |
| Conventional direction |
+ |
- |
Current in series circuits
Current that flows through resistors in series have the same
current - just like water flow through a single pipe.
ITotal = I1 =
I2 = I3 =...
ITotal - the equivalent current in amps [A].
I1 - current of load #1 in amps
[A].
I2 - current of load #2 in amps
[A].
I3 - current of load #3 in amps
[A].
Current in parallel circuits
Current that flows through loads in parallel have equal current -
just like water flow through parallel pipes.
ITotal = I1 +
I2 + I3 +...
ITotal - the equivalent current in amps [A].
I1 - current of load #1 in amps
[A].
I2 - current of load #2 in amps
[A].
I3 - current of load #3 in amps
[A].
Current divider
The current division of resistors in parallel is
Req = 1 / (1/R2
+ 1/R3)
I1 = ITotal ·
Req / (R1+Req)
Kirchhoff's current law (KCL)
The junction of several electrical components is called a node.
The algebraic sum of currents entering a node is zero.
∑ Ik = 0
Alternating Current (AC)
Alternating current is generated by a sinusoidal voltage source.
Ohm's law
IZ =
VZ / Z
IZ -
current flow through the load measured in amperes
[A]
VZ - voltage
drop on the load measured in
volts [V]
Z -
impedance of the load
measured in ohms [Ω]
Angular frequency
ω = 2π f
ω - angular velocity measured in radians per second [rad/s]
f - frequency measured in hertz [Hz].
Momentary current
i(t) = Ipeak
sin(ωt+θ)
i
- current at time t, measured in amps [A].
Ipeak - maximal current (=amplitude of
sine), measured in amps [A].
ω
- angular frequency measured in radians per second [rad/s].
t
- time, measured in seconds [s].
θ
- phase of sine wave in radians [rad].
RMS (effective) current
Irms =
Ieff = Ipeak / √2 ≈
0.707 Ipeak
Peak-to-peak current
Ip-p =
2Ipeak
Current measurement
Current measurement is done by connecting the ammeter in series to the measured object, so
all the measured current will
flow through the ammeter.
The ammeter has very low resistance, so it almost does not affect
the measured circuit.
See also