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Flow of Electric Charges in Metallic Conductors
Complete conceptual guide for CBSE Class 12, NEET, JEE Main, JEE Advanced, Olympiad Physics, AP Physics, IB Physics and A-Level Physics.
Section 1: Introduction to Electric Current
Electric current is the rate at which electric charge crosses a given cross-section. In metallic conductors, free electrons are the mobile charge carriers. When no electric field is applied, electrons move randomly and no net current is produced. When a potential difference is applied, an electric field develops and electrons acquire a small drift velocity.
Conventional Current
Direction in which positive charge would move. In external circuits, it is from higher potential to lower potential.
Electron Flow
In metals, electrons drift opposite to conventional current because they are negatively charged.
Unit and Dimension
SI unit is ampere. Since I = Q/t, dimensional formula is [A].
Section 2: Mathematical Definition of Current
Section 3: Flow of Electric Charges in Metallic Conductors
Metal consists of fixed positive lattice ions and mobile free electrons. Electrons undergo rapid random thermal motion. This random motion gives zero average velocity. Under electric field, electrons experience force F = -eE and acquire slow drift motion opposite to field.
Section 4: Drift Velocity
Drift velocity is the average velocity gained by free electrons due to applied electric field. It is very small because electrons repeatedly collide with lattice ions.
Section 5: Current in Terms of Drift Velocity
Section 6: Current Density
Current density is a vector directed along conventional current. In non-uniform conductors, current may remain same in steady state while current density changes because area changes.
Section 7: Mobility of Electrons
Mobility is drift velocity per unit electric field. It measures how easily electrons drift in a material.
Section 8: Ohm's Law
Ohm's law states that current through a conductor is directly proportional to potential difference across it, provided temperature and physical conditions remain constant.
Section 9: Resistance
Resistance is opposition offered by a conductor to current flow. It depends on length, area, material and temperature.
Section 10: Resistivity
Resistivity is a material property that measures intrinsic opposition to current. Conductors have low resistivity, insulators have very high resistivity, and semiconductors lie between them.
Conductors
Low resistivity, many free electrons.
Semiconductors
Moderate resistivity, strongly temperature dependent.
Insulators
Very high resistivity, almost no free charge carriers.
Section 11: Conductivity
Conductivity is reciprocal of resistivity and measures ease of current flow. Microscopically, conductivity depends on electron density and mobility.
Section 12: Temperature Dependence of Resistance
In metals, increasing temperature increases lattice vibrations. Electrons collide more frequently, relaxation time decreases, and resistance increases. Semiconductors usually show negative temperature coefficient because carrier concentration increases significantly with temperature.
Metals
Resistance increases with temperature.
Carbon
Often shows negative temperature coefficient.
Thermistors
Used as temperature sensors because resistance changes strongly with temperature.
Section 13: Power and Energy
Household electricity bills are based on electrical energy consumed. One commercial unit is 1 kWh.
Section 14: Advanced Conceptual Questions
Section 15: IIT-JEE Advanced Numerical Problems
Section 16: NEET MCQs
Section 17: JEE Main MCQs
Section 18: JEE Advanced MCQs
Section 19: CBSE Case Study Questions
Section 20: Common Mistakes
Direction Confusion
Remember conventional current is opposite to electron flow in metals.
Drift Velocity Misconception
Drift velocity is small, but current can be large because number density is huge.
Mobility Mistake
Mobility is vd/E, not E/vd.
Resistivity Mistake
Resistance depends on dimensions; resistivity depends mainly on material and temperature.
Section 21: Exam Strategy
CBSE
Focus on definitions, derivations, diagrams, units and NCERT questions.
NEET
Master formulas and quick calculation traps.
JEE Main
Practise multi-step numericals and graph interpretation.
JEE Advanced
Focus on non-uniform conductors, current density vector and microscopic models.
Olympiad
Build reasoning from charge conservation and microscopic electron motion.
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