Using the simulation in class / Teaching the relationship between voltage, current and resistance
Open in new tab:
HEADLINE LEARNING POINTS
Increasing the battery voltage increases the current
Increasing the bulb resistance decreases the current
UNDERSTANDING
When you change the battery voltage, the new potentials are set up everywhere round the circuit at (very, very nearly) exactly the same time
So the current changes everywhere at (very, very nearly) exactly the same time
Increasing the battery voltage makes the bulb get brighter because both the current through the bulb and the potential difference across the bulb increase
You can see this in the animation because each charge arrives at the bulb with more energy, and the charges with energy arrive faster
USING THE SIMULATION
Change the battery voltage and observe what happens to the speed of the charges - the current
Big voltage gives big current
Change the bulb resistance and observe what happens to the current
Big resistance gives small current
Ask students:
What are the two reasons the bulb gets brighter when you increase the battery voltage?
What happens to the potentials round the circuit when you change the bulb resistance?
What happens to the current when you increase the bulb resistance?
Which are brighter, high resistance bulbs or low resistance bulbs?
SUBTLETIES
You can’t easily intentionally change the resistance of a bulb - all you can do is take one bulb out and replace it with a different one
The relationship between voltage, current and resistance is often misnamed Ohm’s Law or V = IR
Ohm’s Law just says that for a very small number of components - mostly wires that aren’t too warm - current is directly proportional to p.d.
Real filament bulbs are nowhere near Ohmic - their resistance rises sharply with temperature - except when the voltage is very low and the filament isn’t very warm
The bulb in the simulation is Ohmic to make the numbers easier
At this early stage it’s probably best not to mention Ohm’s Law or what resistance is - the safest analogue for increasing resistance is a marble falling through syrup rather than water, since charges in a circuit are moving at a terminal velocity
MISCONCEPTIONS
The idea of ‘resistance’ is really horrible and causes all sorts of problems
Physical systems where you feel a ‘resistance’ to motion (e.g. the rope loop analogy) are not analogous to how circuits work - but they appear to be - even to clever people who should know better
Resistors do not ‘resist the flow of current’ because there’s no fixed current for them to resist
Students think batteries have to ‘try harder’ to ‘push’ current through the ‘resistance’.
This is part of the ‘constant current misconception’
Batteries are constant voltage providers, but students often implicitly believe they are (or try to be) constant current providers
If you increase the resistance then the current is smaller
This means the battery is working less hard
It doesn’t struggle to try and maintain a constant current - it just gives up a bit