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Electric Circuits
You might have been wondering how electrons can continuously flow in a
uniform direction through wires without the benefit of these hypothetical
electron Sources and Destinations. In order for the Source-and-Destination
scheme to work, both would have to have an infinite capacity for electrons in
order to sustain a continuous flow! Using the marble-and-tube analogy, the
marble source and marble destination buckets would have to be infinitely large
to contain enough marble capacity for a "flow" of marbles to be
sustained.
The answer to this paradox is found in the concept of a circuit: a
never-ending looped pathway for electrons. If we take a wire, or many wires
joined end-to-end, and loop it around so that it forms a continuous pathway, we
have the means to support a uniform flow of electrons without having to resort
to infinite Sources and Destinations:
Each electron advancing clockwise in this circuit pushes on the one in front
of it, which pushes on the one in front of it, and so on, and so on, just like a
hula-hoop filled with marbles. Now, we have the capability of supporting a
continuous flow of electrons indefinitely without the need for infinite electron
supplies and dumps. All we need to maintain this flow is a continuous means of
motivation for those electrons, which we'll address in the next section of this
chapter.
It must be realized that continuity is just as important in a circuit as it
is in a straight piece of wire. Just as in the example with the straight piece
of wire between the electron Source and Destination, any break in this circuit
will prevent electrons from flowing through it:
An important principle to realize here is that it doesn't matter where the
break occurs. Any discontinuity in the circuit will prevent electron flow
throughout the entire circuit. Unless there is a continuous, unbroken loop of
conductive material for electrons to flow through, a sustained flow simply
cannot be maintained.
REVIEW:
- A circuit is an unbroken loop of conductive material that allows
electrons to flow through continuously without beginning or end.
- If a circuit is "broken," that means it's conductive elements no
longer form a complete path, and continuous electron flow cannot occur in
it.
- The location of a break in a circuit is irrelevant to its inability to
sustain continuous electron flow. Any break, anywhere in a
circuit prevents electron flow throughout the circuit.
Lessons In Electric Circuits copyright (C) 2000-2002 Tony R. Kuphaldt,
under the terms and conditions of the Design
Science License.
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