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25.1: Q  It  (3.6 A)(3)(3600 s)  3.89  10 4 C.

25.2: a) Current is given by I  Q


t  420 C
80 ( 60 s )  8.75  10 2 A.
b) I  nqvd A
I 8.75  102 A
 vd  
nqA (5.8  1028 )(1.6  1019 C)( π(1.3  10 3 m) 2 )
=1.78  10 6 m s .

I 4.85 A
25.3: a) vd  
nqA (8.5  10 )(1.6  10 C)( π 4)( 2.05  10 3 m) 2 )
28 19

 1.08  104 m s
 travel time  d
vd
 1.08 0.10
71 m
4
ms
 6574 s  110 min
b) If the diameter is now 4.12 mm, the time can be calculated using the formula above
or comparing the ratio of the areas, and yields a time of 26542 s =442 min.
c) The drift velocity depends on the diameter of the wire as an inverse square
relationship.

25.4: The cross-sectional area of the wire is


A  πr 2  π (2.06  103 m) 2  1.333  105 m 2 .
The current density is
I 8.00A
J   6.00  10 5 A m 2
A 1.333  10 5 m 2
We have vd  J ne ; Therefore
J 6.00  105 A m 2 electrons
n  5 19
 6.94  1028
vd e (5.40  10 m s)(1.60  10 C electron ) m3

25.5: J  n q vd , so J vd is constant.
J1 vd 1  J 2 vd 2 ,
vd 2  vd 1 ( J 2 J1 )  vd 1 ( I 2 I1 )  (1.20  104 m s)(6.00 1.20)  6.00  104 m s
25.6: The atomic weight of copper is 63.55 g mole, and its density is 8.96 g cm 3 . The
number of copper atoms in 1.00 m 3 is thus
(8.96 g cm3 )(1.00  106 cm3 m 3 )(6.023  10 23 atoms mole )
63.55 g mole
 8.49  1028 atoms m 3
Since there are the same number of free electrons m 3 as there are atoms of copper m3
(see Ex. 25.1), The number of free electrons per copper atom is one.

25.7: Consider 1 m 3 of silver.


density  10.5  10 3 kg m 3 , so m  10.5  10 3 kg
M  107.868  10 3 kg mol , so n  m M  9.734  104 mol and
N  nN A  5.86  1028 atoms m 3
If there is one free electron per m 3 , there are 5.86  1028 free electrons m 3 . This
agrees with the value given in Exercise 25.2.

25.8: a) Qtotal  (nCl  n Na )e  (3.92  1016  2.68  1016 )(1.60  10 19 C)  0.0106 C
Q 0.0106 C
 I  total   0.0106 A  10.6 mA.
t 1.00 s
b) Current flows, by convention, in the direction of positive charge. Thus, current
flows with Na  toward the negative electrode.

8 8
0.65 3 8 8
25.9: a) Q   I dt   (55  0.65 t 2 ) dt  55t | 
t |  329 C.
0 0
0 3 0

b) The same charge would flow in 10 seconds if there was a constant current of:
I  Q t  (329 C) (8 s)  41.1 A.

25.10: a) J  I
A  3.6 A
( 2.3  10 3 m ) 2
 6.81  10 5 A/m 2 .
b) E  ρJ  (1.72  108   m)(6.81  105 A/m 2 )  0.012 V m .
c) Time to travel the wire’s length:
l l nqA (4.0 m)(8.5  1028 m 3 )(1.6  1019 C)( 2.3  10 3 m) 2
t    8.0  104 s
vd I 3.6 A
 1333 min  22 hrs!

ρL (1.72  108   m)( 24.0 m)


25.11: R    0.125 .
A (π 4)( 2.05  10  3 m) 2
ρL RA (1.00 )(π 4)(0.462  10 3 m) 2
25.12: R  L   9.75 m.
A ρ 1.72  10 8   m

25.13: a) tungsten:
ρI (5.25  108  m 3 )(0.820 A)
E  ρJ   3
 5.16  10  3 V m .
A (π 4)(3.26  10 m) 2

b) aluminum:
ρI ( 2.75  108  m3 )(0.820 A)
E  ρJ    2.70  10  3 V m .
A (π 4)(3.26  10  3 m) 2

2 2
ρ L ρ L πd πd ρCu
25.14: R Al  RCu  Al  Cu  A l  Cu  d Cu  d Al
AAl ACu 4 ρ Al 4 ρCu ρ Al
1.72  108   m
 d Al  (3.26 mm )  2.6 mm.
2.75  10 8   m

25.15: Find the volume of one of the wires:


ρL ρL
R so A  and
A R
ρL2 1.72  108 Ohm  m)(3.50m) 2
volume  AL    1.686  10  6 mcb
R 0.125Ohm
m  (density )V  (8.9  10 kg m 3 )(1.686  10 6 m 3 )  15 g
3

25.16:

3.5 cm
r1   1.75 cm
2
3.25 mm
r2   1.625 mm
2
25.17: a) From Example 25.1, an 18-gauge wire has A  8.17  10 3 cm 2
I  JA  (1.0  105 A/cm 2 )(8.17  103 cm 2 )  820 A
b) A  I J  (1000 A) (1.0  106 A cm 2 )  1.0  103 cm 2
A  πr 2 so r  A π  (1.0  10 3 cm 2 π  0.0178 cm
d  2r  0.36 mm

25.18: Assuming linear variation of the resistivity with temperature:


ρ  ρ0 [1  (T  T0 )]
 ρ0 [1  ( 4.5  10 3 C)(320  20)C]
 2.35 ρ0
Since   E J , the electric field required to maintain a given current density is
proportional to the resistivity. Thus E  (2.35)(0.0560 V m)  0.132 V m
ρL ρL ρ 2.75  108   m
25.19: R   2    1.53  10 8 
A L L 1.80m

25.20: The ratio of the current at 20C to that at the higher temperature is
(0.860 A) (0.220 A)  3.909. Since the current density for a given field is inversely
proportional to ρ( ρ  E J ), The resistivity must be a factor of 3.909 higher at the higher
temperature.
ρ
 1   (T  T0 )
ρ0
ρ
ρ0 1 3.909  1
T  T0   20C   666C
 4.5  10 3 C

V ρL ρL IL (6.00 A)( 2.75  10 8   m)(1.20 m)


R   r 
25.21: I A πr 2 πV π (1.50 V)
 2.05  10 4 m.

RA VA (4.50 V)π (6.54  10 4 m) 2


25.22: ρ     1.37  10 7   m.
L IL (17.6 A)( 2.50 m)
EA (0.49 V m)( π 4 (0.84  10 3 m) 2 )
25.23: a) I  JA    11 .1 A.
ρ (2.44  10 8   m)
IL (11 .1 A)( 2.44  10 8   m)(6.4 m)
b) V  IR    3.13 V.
A (π 4)(0.84  10 3 m) 2
V 3.13 V
c) R    0.28 Ω.
I 11 .1A

25.24: Because the density does not change, volume stays the same, so LA  (2 L)( A 2)
and the area is halved. So the resistance becomes:
ρ( 2 L ) ρL
R 4  4 R0 .
A2 A
That is, four times the original resistance.

RAJ RI V 0.938 V
25.25: a) E  ρJ      1.25 V m .
L L L 0.75 m
RA V 0.938 V
b) ρ     2.84  10 8   m.
L JL (4.40  10 A m )(0.75 m)
7 2

R  R0
25.26:   (T f  Ti )
R0
R  R0 1.512   1.484 
    1.35  10 3 C 1 .
(T f  Ti ) R0 (34.0 C  20.0 C)(1.484 )
 

25.27:a) R f  Ri  Ri (T f  Ti )  R f  100   100 (0.0004C 1 )(11 .5C)  99.54 .


b) R f  Ri  Ri (T f  Ti )  R f  0.0160   0.0160 (0.0005C 1 )( 25.8C) 
0.0158 .

R f  Ri R f  Ri
25.28: T f  Ti  ; T f  Ti 
Ri Ri
215.8   217.3 
 1
 4 o C  17.8o C.
(0.0005 C )( 217.3 )
o
25.29: a) If 120 strands of wire are placed side by side, we are effectively increasing the
area of the current carrier by 120. So the resistance is smaller by that factor:
R  5.60  106  120  4.67  108 .
b) If 120 strands of wire are placed end to end, we are effectively increasing the
length of the wire by 120, and so R  (5.60  10 6 Ω)120  6.72  10 4 .

25.30: With the 4.0  load, where r = internal resistance


12.6 V  (r  4.0 ) I
Change in terminal voltage:
VT  rI  12.6 V  10.4 V  2.2 V
2.2 V
I
r
 2 .2 V 
Substitute for I: 12.6 V  (r  4.0 ) 
 r 
Solve for r: r  0.846 

L 1.72  10 8 m)(100  10 3 m)
25.31: a) R    0.219
A π (0.050m) 2
V  IR  (125A)(0.219)  27.4V
b) P  VI  (27.4 V)(125 A)  3422 W  3422 J/s
Energy  Pt  (3422 J/s )(3600 s)  1.23  10 7 J

25.32: a) Vr  ε  Vab  24.0 V  21.2 V  2.8 V  r  2.8 V 4.00 A  0.700  .


b) VR  21.2 V  R  21.2 V 4.00 A  5.30 .

25.33: a) An ideal voltmeter has infinite resistance, so there would be NO current


through the 2.0  resistor.
b) Vab  ε  5.0 V; since there is no current there is no voltage lost over the internal
resistance.
c) The voltmeter reading is therefore 5.0 V since with no current flowing, it measures
the terminal voltage of the battery.
25.34: a) A voltmeter placed over the battery terminals reads the emf: ε  24.0 V.
b) There is no current flowing, so Vr  0.
c) The voltage reading over the switch is that over the battery: Vs  24.0 V.
d) Having closed the switch:
I  24.0 V 5.88   4.08 A  Vab  24.0 V  (4.08 A)(0.28 )  22.9 V.
Vr  IR  (4.08 A)(5.60 )  22.9 V.
Vs  0, since all the voltage has been “used up” in the circuit. The resistance of the
switch is zero so Vs  IR  0.

25.35: a) When there is no current flowing, the voltmeter reading is simply the emf of
the battery: ε  3.08 V.
b) The voltage over the internal resistance is:
V 0.11 V
Vr  3.08 V  2.97 V  0.11 V  r    0.067 .
I 1.65 A
c) V R  2.97 V  (1.65 A) R
2.97 V
R  1.8 
1.65 A

25.36: a) The current is counterclockwise, because the 16 V battery determines the


direction of current flow. Its magnitude is given by:
ε 16.0 V  8.0 V
I   0.47 A.
 R 1.6   5.0   1.4   9.0 
b) Vab  16.0 V  (1.6 )(0.47 A )  15.2 V.
c) Vac  (5.0 )(0.47 A)  (1.4 )(0.47 A)  8.0 V  11 .0 V.
d)
25.37: a) Now the current flows clockwise since both batteries point in that direction:
ε 16.0 V  8.0 V
I   1.41 A.
 R 1.6   5.0   1.4   9.0 
b) Vab  16.0 V  (1.6 )(1.41 A)  13.7 V.
c) Vac  (5.0 )(1.41 A)  (1.4 )(1.41 A)  8.0 V  1.0 V.
d)

25.38: a) Vbc  1.9 V  I  Vbc Rbc  1.9 V 9.0   0.21 A.


5.48
b)  ε   IR  8.0 V  ((1.6  9.0  1.4  R ))(0.21 A)  R   26.1 .
0.21
c)

25.39: a) Nichrome wire:

b) The Nichrome wire does obey Ohm’s Law since it is a straight line.
c) The resistance is the voltage divided by current which is 3.88 .
25.40: a) Thyrite resistor:

b) The Thyrite is non-Ohmic since the plot is curved.


c) Calculating the resistance at each point by voltage divided by current:

25.41: a) r  ε I  1.50 V 14.8 A  0.101 .


b) r  ε I  1.50 V 6.8 A  0.22 .
c) r  ε I  12.6 V 1000 A  0.0126  .

25.42: a) P  V 2 R  R  V 2 P  (15 V) 2 327 W  0.688 .


V 15 V
b) V  IR  I    21.8 A.
R 0.688 

25.43: P  VI  (650 V)(0.80 A)  520 W.

25.44: W  Pt  IVt  (0.13 A)(9 V)(1.5)(3600 s)  6318 J.


P I 2 R J 2 A 2 R J 2 A( L A)
25.45: a) P  I 2 R  p      J 2   p  JE since
vol AL AL L
E  J .
b) From (a) p  J 2  .
c) Since J  E ρ, (a) becomes p  E 2 ρ.
25.46: a) I   ε Rtotal  8.0 V 17   0.47 A  P5  I 2 R  (0.47 A) 2 (5.0 ) 
1.1 W and P9   I 2 R  (0.47 A) 2 (9.0 )  2.0 W.
b) P16V  εI  I 2 r  (16 V)(0.47 A)  (0.47 A) 2 (1.6 )  7.2 W.
c) P8V  εI  Ir 2  (8.0 V)(0.47 A)  (0.47 A) 2 (1.4)  4.1 W.
d) ( b)  (a )  (c)

25.47: a) W  Pt  IVt  (60 A )(12 V)(3600 s)  2.59  10 6 J.


b) To release this much energy we need a volume of gasoline given by:
2.59  10 6 J m 0.056 kg
m  56.0 g  vol    6.22  10 5 m 3  0.062 liters .
46,000 J g  900 kg m 3
c) To recharge the battery:
t  (Wh) P  (720 Wh ) (450 W )  1.6 h.

25.48: a) I  ε ( R  r )  12 V 10   1.2 A  P  εI  (12 V)(1.2 A)  14.4 W.


This is less than the previous value of 24 W.
b) The work dissipated in the battery is just: P  I 2 r  (1.2 A) 2 (2.0 )  2.9 W.
This is less than 8 W, the amount found in Example (25.9).
c) The net power output of the battery is 14.4 W  2.9 W  11.5 W. This is less than
16 W, the amount found in Example (25.9).

25.49: a) I  V R  12 V 6   2.0 A  P  εI  (12 V) (2.0 A)  24 W.


b) The power dissipated in the battery is P  I 2 r  ( 2.0 A) 2 (1.0 )  4.0 W.
c) The power delivered is then 24 W  4 W  20 W.

25.50: a) I   ε / R  3.0 V / 17   0.18 A  P  I 2 R  0.529 W.


b) W  Pt  IVt  (0.18 A)(3.0 V)(5.0)(3600 s)  9530 J.
c) Now if the power to the bulb is 0.27 W,
2
 3 .0 V 
P  I R  0.27 W  
2
 (17 )  (17   R ) 2  567  2  R  6.8 .
 17   R 
25.51: a) P  V 2 R  R  V 2 P  (120 V) 2 / 540 W  26.7 .
b) I  V R  120 V / 26.7   4.5 A.
c) If the voltage is just 110 V, then I  4.13 A  P  VI  454 W.
d) Greater. The resistance will be less so the current drawn will increase, increasing
the power.

m
25.52: From Eq. (25.24), ρ  .
ne 2 τ
m 9.11  10 31 kg
τ 2  3 19
 1.55  10 12 s.
ne ρ (1.0  10 m ) (1.60  10 C) (2300   m)
16 2

b) The number of free electrons in copper (8.5  10 28 m 3 ) is much larger than in


pure silicon (1.0  1016 m 3 ).

RA (0.104 ) (π 4) (2.50  10 3 m) 2
25.53: a) ρ    3.65  10 8   m.
L 14.0 m
EA (1.28 V m) (π 4) (2.50  103 m) 2
b) I  JA    172 A.
ρ 3.65  10 8   m
J E 1.28 V/m
c) vd   
nq ρnq (3.65  10   m) (8.5  1028 m  3 ) (1.6  1019 C)
8

 2.58  10 3 m/s.

25.54: r = 2.00 cm
T = 0.100 mm

V V VA V (2πrT )
I   
R ρl A ρl ρl
(12 V) (2π )( 2.00  10 2 m) (0.100  10 3 m)

(1.47  10 8   m) (25.0 m)
 410 A
25.55: With the voltmeter connected across the terminals of the battery there is no
current through the battery and the voltmeter reading is the battery emf; ε  12.6 V.
With a wire of resistance R connected to the battery current I flows and
ε  Ir  IR  0
Call the resistance of the 20.0-m piece R1 ; then the resistance of the 40.0-m piece
is R2  2R1 .
ε  I1r  I1R1  0; 12.6 V  (7.00 A)r  (7.00 A)R1  0
ε  I 2 r  I 2 (2 R1 )  0; 12.6 V  (4.20 A)r  (4.20 A)( 2 R1 )  0
Solving these two equations in two unknowns gives R1  1.20. This is the
resistance of 20.0 m, so the resistance of one meter is [1.20 /( 20.0m)] (1.00m)  0.060

V V
25.56: a) I  
R RCu  R Ag
and
ρCu LCu (1.72  10 8   m) (0.8 m)
RCu    0.049 ,
ACu (π/4) (6.0  10  4 m) 2
and
ρ Ag LAg (1.47  10 8   m) (1.2 m)
RAg    0.062 
AAg (π/4) (6.0  10 4 m) 2
5 .0 V
I  45 A.
0.049   0.062 
So the current in the copper wire is 45 A.
b) The current in the silver wire is 45 A, the same as that in the copper wire or else
charge would build up at their interface.
IR (45 A) (0.049 )
c) ECu  JρCu  Cu   2.76 V m .
LCu 0 .8 m
IR (45 A) (0.062 )
d) E Ag  Jρ Ag  Ag   2.33 V m .
LAg 1 .2 m
e) V Ag  IR Ag  (45 A) (0.062 )  2.79 V.
25.57: a) The current must be the same in both sections of the wire, so the current in the
thin end is 2.5 mA.
ρI (1.72  108   m) (2.5  103 A)
b) E1.6mm  ρJ   3
 2.14  10  5 V/m.
A (π 4) (1.6  10 A) 2

ρI (1.72  10 8   m) (2.5  10 3 A)
c) E 0.8mm  ρJ  
A (π 4) (0.80  10 3 A) 2
= 8.55  10 5 V/m ( 4 E1.6mm ).
d) V  E1.6 mm L1.6 mm  E 0.8 mm L0.8 mm
 V  (2.14  105 V/m) (1.20 m)  (8.55  105 V/m) (1.80 m)  1.80  10 4 V.

K 1 2
25.58: a)  n  mvd 
volume 2 
K 1
  (8.5  1028 m  3 ) (9.11  10 31 kg) (1.5  10  4 m/s) 2
volume 2
 8.7  10 10 J / m 3 .
b) U  qV  ne( volume)V  (8.5  1028m 3 ) (1.6  1019C) (10 6 m 3 ) (1.0 V)  13600 J.
And the kinetic energy in 1.0 cm 3 is K  (8.7  1010 J/m 3 ) (106 m) 
U 13600 J
8.7  10 16 J. So   1.6  1019.
K 8.7  10 16 J
25.59: a)

ρL ρdx r r 
dR   2 where r  r1   1 2  x.
A πr  h 
h r2
ρ dx ρh du
R  
0    x
π r1  r1  r2
h
2
π(r1  r2 ) r1
u2
r2
ρh 1 ρh  1 
 R  .
π (r1  r2 ) u r π  r1r2 
1

ρh ρL
b) When r1  r2  r , R  2  .
πr A

b b
ρdr ρ dr ρ 1 ρ 1 1
25.60: a) dR 
4πr 2
R
4π a r 2   4π r a  4π  a  b .
V V 4πab I Vab 4πab Vab ab
b) I  ab  ab J   .
R ρ(b  a ) A ρ(b  a) 4πr 2
ρ(b  a )r 2
c) If the thickness of the shells is small, we have the resistance given by:
ρ  1 1  ρ (b  a ) ρL ρL
R     2
 , where L  b  a.
4π  a b  4πab 4πa A

25.61: E  ρJ and E  σ
Kε0  Q
AKε0  ρJ  Q
AKε 0  AJ  I  Q
Kε 0 ρ  leakage current.
25.62: a) I  VR  J  AI  RAV
   LV/ A  A  VL . So to make the current density a
maximum, we need the length between faces to be as small as possible, which means
L  d . So the potential difference should be applied to those faces which are a distance
d apart. This maximum current density is J MAX  ρd V
.

b) For a maximum current I  VR  VA


ρL  JA must be a maximum. The maximum area
is presented by the faces that are a distance d apart, and these two faces also have the
greatest current density, so again, the potential should be placed over the faces a distance
d apart. This maximum current is
Vd
I MAX  6 .
ρ

ρL (9.5  107   m) (0.12 m)


25.63: a) R    0.057 .
A (π 4) (0.0016 m) 2
b) ρ(T )  ρ0 (1  αT )  ρ(60 C)  (9.5  107   m) (1  (0.00088(C) 1 ) (40C)
 ρ(60C)  9.83  107   m    3.34  108   m.

c) V  βV0 T  AL  A ( βL0 T )  L  βL0 T  (18  10 5 (C) 1 ) 


(0.12 m) (40C)  L  8.64  10 4 m  0.86 mm. The volume of the fluid remains
constant. As the fluid expands the container, outward expansion “becomes” upward
expansion due to surface effects.
ρL ρL ρL
d) R   R  
A A A
(3.34  108   m) (0.12 m) (95  108   m) (0.86  103 m)
 R  
(π/4) (0.0016 m) 2 (π/4) (0.0016 m) 2
 2.40  10 3 .
e) From Equation (25.12), α  1
T  R
R0 
1  1
40 C 
( 0.057   2.40  103  )
0.057  
1 
1.1  10 3 (C) 1. This value is greater than the temperature coefficient of resistivity and
therefore is an important change caused by the length increase.
25.64: a) I 
 ε  8.0 V  4.0 V  0.167 A
R 24.0 
 Vad  8.00 V  (0.167 A) (8.50 )  6.58 V.
b) The terminal voltage is

Vbc   4.00 V  (0.167 A) (0.50 )   4.08 V.

c) Adding another battery at point d in the opposite sense to the 8.0 V battery:

I
 ε  10.3 V  8.0 V  4.0 V  0.257 A, and so
R 24.5 
 Vbc  4.00 V  (0.257 A) (0.50 )  3.87 V.

25.65: a) Vab  ε  Ir  8.4 V  ε  (1.50 A) r and 9.4 V  ε  (3.50 A) r


 9.4 V  (8.4 V  (1.50 A)r )  (3.50 A)r
9.4 V  8.4 V
r  0.2 .
5.00 A
b) ε  8.4 V  (1.50 A) (0.20 )  8.7 V.

25.66: a) I  V / R  14 kV / (10 k  2 k)  1.17 A.


b) P  I 2 R  (1.17 A) 2 (10,000 )  13.7 kW.
c) If we want the current to be 1.0 mA, then the internal resistance must be:
14,000 V
Rr  1.4  107   R  14 M  10 k  14 M.
0.001 A

ρL (5.0   m) (0.10 m)
25.67: a) R    1000 .
A π (0.050 m) 2
b) V  IR  (100  10 3 A) (1000 )  100 V.
c) P  VI  (100V) (100  10 3 A)  10 W.
25.68: a) V  2.50 I  0.360 I 2  4.0 V. Solving the quadratic equation yields
I  1.34 A or  8.29 A, so the appropriate current through the semiconductor is
I  1.34 A.
b) If the current I  2.68 A,
 V  (2.50 V / A) (2.68 A)  (0.36 V / A 2 ) (2.68 A) 2  9.3 V.

25.69: V  IR  V ( I )  IR  αI  βI 2  (α  R ) I  βI 2
 βI 2  ( R  α ) I  V  0
 (1.3) I 2  (3.8  3.2) I  12.6  0  I  1.42 A.

25.70: a) r 
ε  7.86 V  0.85   I  ε 
7.86 V
 2.42 A.
I 9.25 A Rr 0.85   2.4 
b) βI  (α  r ) I  ε  0  0.36 I  (2.50  0.85) I  7.86  0
2 2

 I  1.94 A
c) The terminal voltage at this current is
Vab  ε  Ir  7.86 V  (1.94 A) (0.85 )  6.21 V.

25.71: a) With an ammeter in the circuit:


I
ε  ε  I A (r  R  R A ).
r  R  RA
So with no ammeter:

I
ε  r  R  RA 
 I A 

  I A 1 
RA 
.
rR  rR   r  R 
b) We want:
I  RA  RA
 1    1.01   0.01  RA (0.01) (0.45   3.8 )
IA  r  R rR
 0.0425 .
c) This is a maximum value, since any larger resistance makes the current even less
that it would be without it. That is, since the ammeter is in series, ANY resistance it has
increases the circuit resistance and makes the reading less accurate.
25.72: a) With a voltmeter in the circuit:

I
ε 
 Vab  ε  Ir  ε 1 
r 
 .
r  RV  r  RV 

b) We want:
Vab  r  r
 1    0.99   0.01
ε  r  RV  r  RV
r  0.01r
 RV   99r  99  045   44.6 .
0.01
c) This is the minimum resistance necessary—any greater resistance leads to less
current flow and hence less potential loss over the battery’s internal resistance.

25.73: a) The line voltage, current to be drawn, and wire diameter are what must be
considered in household wiring.
P 4200 W
b) P  VI  I    35 A, so the 8-gauge wire is necessary, since it can
V 120 V
carry up to 40 A.
I 2 ρL (35 A) 2 (1.72  108   m) (42.0 m)
c) P  I 2 R    106 W.
A (  4) (0.00326 m) 2
d) If 6-gauge wire is used,
I 2 ρL (35 A)2 (1.72  10 8 Ω  m) (42 m)
P   66 W
A (π 4) ) (0.00412 m) 2
 E  Pt  ( 40 W ) (365) (12 h )  175 kWh
 Savings  (175 kWh ) ($0.11 kWh )  $19.25.

25.74: Initially: R0  V I 0  (120 V) (1.35 A)  88.9 .


Finally: R f  V I f  (120 V) (1.23 A)  97.6 .
Rf 1 R  1  97.6  
And  1  α (T f  T0 )  (T f  T0 )   f  1  4 1
  1
R0 α  R0  4.5  10 C  88.9  
 T f  T0  217C  T f  217C  20C  237C.
b) (i) P0  VI 0  (120 V) (1.35 A)  162 W
(ii) Pf  VI f  (120 V) (1.23 A)  148 W
 ε 12.0 V  8.0 V
25.75: a) I    0.40 A.
R 10.0 
b) Ptotal  I 2 Rtotal  (0.40 A) 2 (10 )  1.6 W.
c) Power generated in ε1 , P  ε1 I  (12.0 V ) (0.40 A)  4.8 W.
d) Rate of electrical energy transferred to chemical energy in
ε2 P  ε2 I  (8.0 V)  (0.40 A)  3.2 W.
e) Note (c)  (b)  (d), and so the rate of creation of electrical energy equals its rate
of dissipation.

 L (2.0  10 7   m) (2.0 m)
25.76: a) Rsteel    1.57  10 3 
A ( 4) (0.018 m) 2

ρL (1.72  10 8   m) (35 m)
RCu    0.012 
A (π 4) (0.008 m) 2
 V  IR  I ( Rsteel  RCu )  (15000 A) (1.57  10 3   0.012 )  204 V.
b) E  Pt  I 2 Rt  (15000 A) 2 (0.0136 ) (65  10 6 s)  199 J.

|q| a
25.77: a)  F  ma  | q | E   .
m E
| q | aL
b) If the electric field is constant, Vbc  EL   .
m Vbc
c) The free charges are “left behind” so the left end of the rod is negatively charged,
while the right end is positively charged. Thus the right end is at the higher potential.
V | q | (1.0  103 V) (1.6  1019 C)
d) a  bc   3.5  108 m/s 2 .
mL (9.11  10 31 kg ) (0.50 m)
e) Performing the experiment in a rotational way enables one to keep the
experimental apparatus in a localized area—whereas an acceleration like that obtained in
(d), if linear, would quickly have the apparatus moving at high speeds and large
distances.
25.78: a) We need to heat the water in 6 minutes, so the heat and power required are:
Q  mcv T  (0.250 kg) (4190 J/kg C) (80C)  83800 J
Q 83800 J
P   233 W.
t 6(60 s)
V2 V 2 (120 V) 2
But P  R   61.8 .
R P 233 W
 L  L2 R  vol (61.8 ) (2.5  10 5 m 3 )
b) R   L   39 m.
A vol  1.00  10 6   m
Now the radius of the wire can be calculated from the volume:
vol 2.5  10 5 m 3
vol  L(πr 2 )  r    4.5  10 4 m.
πL π (39 m)

25.79: a) Vab  ε  Ir  12.0 V  (10.0 A) (0.24 Ω)  14.4 V.


b) E  Pt  IVt  (10 A) (14.4 V) (5) (3600 s)  2.59  10 6 J.
c) E diss  Pdisst  I 2 rt  (10 A) 2 (0.24 ) (5) (3600 s)  4.32  10 5 J.
d) Discharged at 10 A:
I
ε  R  ε  Ir  12.0 V  (10 A) (0.24 )  0.96 .
rR I 10 A
e) E  Pt  IVt  (10 A) (9.6 V) (5) (3600 s)  1.73  106 J.
f) Since the current through the internal resistance is the same as before, there is the
same energy dissipated as in (c): E diss  4.32  10 5 J.
g) The energy originally supplied went into the battery and some was also lost over
the internal resistance. So the stored energy was less than was needed to charge it. Then
when discharging, even more energy is lost over the internal resistance, and what is left is
dissipated over the external resistor.
25.80: a) Vab  ε  Ir  12.0 V  ( 30 A) (0.24 )  19.2 V.
b) E  Pt  IVt  (30 A ) (19.2 V) (1.7) (3600 s)  3.53  10 6 J.
c) Ediss  Pdisst  I 2 Rt  (30 A) 2 (0.24 ) (1.7) (3600 s)  1.32  106 J.
d) Discharged at 30 A:
I
ε  R  ε  Ir  12.0 V  (30 A) (0.24 )  0.16 .
rR I 30 A
e) E  Pt  I 2 Rt  (30 A) 2 (0.16 ) (1.7) (3600)  8.81  10 5 J.
f) Since the current through the internal resistance is the same as before, there is the
same energy dissipated as in (c): E diss  1.32  10 6 J.
g) Again, the energy originally supplied went into the battery and some was also lost
over the internal resistance. So the stored energy was less than was needed to charge it.
Then when discharging, even more energy is lost over the internal resistance, and what is
left is dissipated over the external resistor. This time, at a higher current, much more
energy is lost over the internal resistance.

1  dρ  n ndT dρ a
25.81: a)        ln (T n )  ln ( ρ)  ρ  n .
ρ  dT  T T ρ T
b) n   T   ( 5  10 4 (K ) 1 ) (293 K )  0.15.
a
  n  a  T n  (3.5  10 5   m) (293 K ) 0.15  8.0  10 5   m  K 0.15.
T
8.0  10 5
c) T   196C  77 K : ρ   4.3  10 5   m.
(77 K ) 0.15
8.0  10 5
T   300C  573 K : ρ   3.2  10 5   m.
(573 K ) 0.15

25.82: a) ε  IR  IR d  2.00 V  I (1.0 )  V  2  I s [exp(eV kT )  1]  V.


3
b) I s  1.50  10 A, T  293 K  1333  exp [39.6 V  667]  667 V .
Trial and error shows that the right-hand side (rhs) above, for specific V values, equals
1333 V, when V  0.179 V. The current then is just
I  I s exp [39.6 V  1]  (1.5  103 A) exp [39.6 (0.179)  1]  1.80 A.
L  dx  0 exp[ x L] dx  L
25.83: a) R   dR    R  0  exp [ x L] dx
A A A A 0
 L V V0 A
 R  0 [ L exp[ x L]]0L  0 (1  e 1 )  I  0  .
A A R 0 L(1  e 1 )
V  ( IR )   I 0 Le  x L  I 0e  x L V e x L
b) E ( x)         0 1 .
x x x  A  A 
L1 e 
e x L V0  V0e 1
c) V ( x)  V0  C  V ( 0)  V0   C  C 
(1  e 1 ) (1  e 1 ) L(1  e 1 )
(e  x / L  e 1 )
 V ( x)  V0 .
(1  e 1 )
d) Graphs of resistivity, electric field and potential from x  0 to L.

25.84: a) I 
ε  P  εI  I 2 r 
dP
 ε  2 Ir  0 for maximum power output.
rR dI
1ε 1
 I P max   I short circuit .
2r 2
b) For the maximum power output of (a), I 
ε 

  R  2r  R  r.
rR 2r
ε ε .
2 2
Then, P  I 2 R    r 
 2r  4r

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