What
Is Electricity?
Electricity figures everywhere in our lives. Electricity
lights up our homes, cooks our food, powers our computers, television sets, and
other electronic devices. Electricity from batteries keeps our cars running and
makes our flashlights shine in the dark.
Here's something you can do to see the importance of
electricity. Take a walk through your school, house or apartment and write down
all the different appliances, devices and machines that use electricity. You'll
be amazed at how many things we use each and every day that depend on
electricity.
But what is electricity? Where does it come from? How does
it work? Before we understand all that, we need to know a little bit about
atoms and their structure.
All matter is made up of atoms, and atoms are made up of
smaller particles. The three main particles making up an atom are the proton,
the neutron and the electron.
Electrons spin around the center, or nucleus, of atoms, in
the same way the moon spins around the earth. The nucleus is made up of
neutrons and protons.
Electrons contain a negative charge, protons a positive
charge. Neutrons are neutral – they have neither a positive nor a negative
charge.
There are many different kinds of atoms, one for each type
of element. An atom is a single part that makes up an element. There are 118
different known elements that make up every thing! Some elements like oxygen we
breathe are essential to life.
Each atom has a specific number of electrons, protons and
neutrons. But no matter how many particles an atom has, the number of electrons
usually needs to be the same as the number of protons. If the numbers are the
same, the atom is called balanced, and it is very stable.
So, if an atom had six protons, it should also have six
electrons. The element with six protons and six electrons is called carbon.
Carbon is found in abundance in the sun, stars, comets, atmospheres of most
planets, and the food we eat. Coal is made of carbon; so are diamonds.
Some kinds of atoms have loosely attached electrons. An atom
that loses electrons has more protons than electrons and is positively charged.
An atom that gains electrons has more negative particles and is negatively
charge. A "charged" atom is called an "ion."
Electrons can be made to move from one atom to another. When
those electrons move between the atoms, a current of electricity is created.
The electrons move from one atom to another in a "flow." One electron
is attached and another electron is lost.
This chain is similar to the fire fighter's bucket brigades
in olden times. But instead of passing one bucket from the start of the line of
people to the other end, each person would have a bucket of water to pour from
one bucket to another. The result was a lot of spilled water and not enough
water to douse the fire. It is a situation that's very similar to electricity
passing along a wire and a circuit. The charge is passed from atom to atom when
electricity is "passed."
Scientists and engineers have learned many ways to move
electrons off of atoms. That means that when you add up the electrons and
protons, you would wind up with one more proton instead of being balanced.
Since all atoms want to be balanced, the atom that has been
"unbalanced" will look for a free electron to fill the place of the
missing one. We say that this unbalanced atom has a "positive charge"
(+) because it has too many protons.
Since it got kicked off, the free electron moves around
waiting for an unbalanced atom to give it a home. The free electron charge is
negative, and has no proton to balance it out, so we say that it has a
"negative charge" (-).
So what do positive and negative charges have to do with
electricity?
Scientists and engineers have found several ways to create
large numbers of positive atoms and free negative electrons. Since positive
atoms want negative electrons so they can be balanced, they have a strong
attraction for the electrons. The electrons also want to be part of a balanced
atom, so they have a strong attraction to the positive atoms. So, the positive
attracts the negative to balance out.
The more positive atoms or negative electrons you have, the
stronger the attraction for the other. Since we have both positive and negative
charged groups attracted to each other, we call the total attraction
"charge."
Energy also can be measured in joules. Joules sounds exactly
like the word jewels, as in diamonds and emeralds. A thousand joules is equal
to a British thermal unit.
When electrons move among the atoms of matter, a current of
electricity is created. This is what happens in a piece of wire. The electrons
are passed from atom to atom, creating an electrical current from one end to
other, just like in the picture.
Electricity is conducted through some things better than
others do. Its resistance measures how well something conducts electricity.
Some things hold their electrons very tightly. Electrons do not move through
them very well. These things are called insulators. Rubber, plastic, cloth,
glass and dry air are good insulators and have very high resistance.
Other materials have some loosely held electrons, which move
through them very easily. These are called conductors. Most metals – like
copper, aluminum or steel – are good conductors.
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