Electricity
INTRODUCTION:
Electricity is a fundamental Physics chapter that explains how electric current flows through conductors, governed by Ohm's Law (V=IR) and influenced by factors like resistance (R=ρ.l/A), material resistivity, and temperature. The chapter explores series and parallel circuits, where resistors combine differently (series: R1+R2+R3; parallel: 1/Req=1/R1+1/R2), and demonstrates practical applications through Joule's heating effect (H=I² Rt)—seen in electric heaters, bulbs, and fuses—and electric power calculations (P=VI=I²R=V²/R). Understanding these concepts unlocks numerical problem-solving (6-8 marks), circuit analysis (3-5 marks), and theory questions (2-3 marks) that appear predictably in every CBSE Board exam. This chapter rewards formula mastery + practice over rote memorization, making it one of the most reliable scoring areas (12-15 marks potential) when you know how to apply the relationships systematically.
What is Electric Current?
Electric current (I) is the rate of flow of electric charge through a conductor.
I=Q/t
· Q = Electric charge (Coulombs, C)
· t = Time (seconds, s)
· Unit of current: Ampere (A) = 1 Coulomb per second
Conventional current: Flows from positive (+) to negative (−) terminal of battery (opposite to actual electron flow).
Ammeter: Measures electric current — always connected in series in a circuit.
Voltmeter: Measures potential difference —
always connected in parallel
across a component.
History: HAND LABOUR & STEAM POWER
Chapter 4: The Age of Industrialisation
Electric Potential and Potential Difference
Electric potential: Work done per unit charge to move a positive test charge from infinity to that point.
V=W/Q
Potential difference (V): Work done per unit charge to move charge from one point to another.
V=W/Q
· Unit: Volt (V) = 1 Joule per Coulomb (J/C)
Why current flows? Current flows from higher potential
to lower potential (conventional). Battery maintains potential difference
continuously.
Class 10 Science – Chapter: Human Eye and the Colourful World complete notes.
Ohm's Law (Most Important!)
Statement: At constant temperature, the electric current flowing through a conductor is directly proportional to the potential difference across its ends.
V∝IV∝I
V=IR
Where R = Resistance (constant of proportionality)
· Unit of Resistance: Ohm (Ω) = 1 Volt per Ampere
V-I Graph: Straight line passing through origin → slope = Resistance (R = V/I).
Ohmic vs Non-Ohmic Conductors
|
Property |
Ohmic conductors |
Non-ohmic devices |
|
Definition |
Follow Ohm's law strictly |
Don't follow Ohm's law |
|
V-I graph |
Straight line through origin |
Curved/irregular |
|
R value |
Constant at all V |
Changes with V |
|
Examples |
Copper, aluminium wires |
Diode, filament bulb, LED |
History: BEFORE THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTIONChapter 4: The Age of Industrialisation
Resistance and Resistivity
Resistance (R): Opposition offered by a conductor to the flow of electric current.
Factors affecting resistance:
R=ρ.l/A
|
Factor |
Effect on Resistance |
|
Length (l) |
R ∝ l (double length = double resistance) |
|
Cross-section area (A) |
R ∝ 1/A (thicker wire = less resistance) |
|
Material (ρ) |
Depends on resistivity of material |
|
Temperature |
Increases for metals; decreases for semiconductors |
Resistivity (ρ): Resistance of a conductor of unit length and unit cross-sectional area. Unit: Ohm-metre (Ω-m). It is a material property, independent of dimensions.
Resistivity Table:
|
Material |
Resistivity (Ω-m) |
Type |
|
Silver |
1.60 × 10⁻⁸ |
Best conductor |
|
Copper |
1.70 × 10⁻⁸ |
Conductor |
|
Aluminium |
2.60 × 10⁻⁸ |
Conductor |
|
Tungsten |
5.60 × 10⁻⁸ |
Metal (bulb filament) |
|
Iron |
10.0 × 10⁻⁸ |
Metal |
|
Nichrome |
100 × 10⁻⁸ |
Alloy (heater element) |
|
Rubber |
10¹³ − 10¹⁶ |
Insulator |
|
Glass |
10¹⁰ − 10¹⁴ |
Insulator |
Why copper used for electric wires? Low resistivity → less heat loss → efficient current transmission.
Why
Nichrome used in heaters?
High resistivity + high melting point → produces maximum heat safely.
Class 10 Science – Chapter 10: Light - Reflection and Refraction complete notes
Resistors in Series Circuit
Series connection: All resistors connected end-to-end in a single path.
Key
formulas:
Rtotal=R1+R2+R3+…+
Itotal=I1=I2=I3(Current same through all)
V=V1+V2+V3(Voltage divides)
Voltage across each resistor: V₁ = IR₁, V₂ = IR₂, V₃ = IR₃
Important: Total series resistance is always greater than the largest individual resistance.
Application: Not used in domestic wiring (single
break stops all; unequal voltages; overall resistance too high).
History: THE INTER-WAR ECONOMY
Chapter 3: The Making of a Global World
Resistors in Parallel Circuit
Parallel connection: All resistors connected between same two points (same voltage).
Key
formulas:
1/Rtotal=1/R1+1/R2+1/R3+…+1/Rn
Vtotal=V1=V2=V3(Voltage same across all)
I=I1+I2+I3(Current divides)
Current through each resistor: I₁ = V/R₁, I₂ = V/R₂, I₃ = V/R₃
Important: Total parallel resistance is always less than the smallest individual resistance.
Application: Used in domestic wiring — each
appliance works independently at same voltage.
Class 10 Science – Chapter 9: Heredity and Evolution complete notes.
Series vs Parallel Complete Comparison
|
Property |
Series Connection |
Parallel Connection |
|
Equivalent resistance |
R₁ + R₂ + R₃ |
Less than smallest R |
|
Current |
Same through all |
Divides I = I₁ + I₂ + I₃ |
|
Voltage |
Divides V = V₁+V₂+V₃ |
Same across all |
|
If one fails |
Whole circuit breaks |
Others continue normally |
|
Bulb brightness |
Dimmer (shares voltage) |
Brighter (full voltage each) |
|
Domestic use |
Not used |
Used (house wiring) |
|
Application |
Decorative bulb chains |
All household circuits |
History: THE NINETEENTH CENTURY (1815-1914) Chapter 3: The Making of a Global World
Heating Effect of Electric Current (Joule's Law)
Joule's Law: When electric current flows through a conductor, heat is produced. The heat produced is:
H= I² Rt
Alternate
forms:
H=VIt(since V = IR)
H= V².R⋅t
Unit: Joule (J) → 1 Calorie = 4.18 J
Applications of Heating Effect
|
Appliance |
Why heating effect used |
Material used |
Why that material |
|
Electric heater/toaster |
Converts electricity to heat |
Nichrome wire |
High ρ, high melting point |
|
Electric iron |
Converts electricity to heat |
Nichrome wire |
Same as above |
|
Electric bulb |
Produces light (via heat) |
Tungsten filament |
Very high melting point (3380°C) |
|
Electric fuse |
Safety device (melts at excess current) |
Tin-lead alloy |
Low melting point |
|
Welding machines |
High heat for welding |
Carbon electrodes |
High resistance |
Why tungsten for bulb filament?
· Melting point 3380°C (highest of all metals)
· Stays solid even at 2500°C operating temperature
· Gives white incandescent light
Why fuse has low melting point?
· Melts quickly when current exceeds rated value
· Breaks circuit before appliances get damaged
Electric Power
Electric power (P): Rate at which electric energy is consumed or work is done.
P=W/t=VI= I²R= V²/R
Unit: Watt (W) = 1 Joule per second (J/s)
Which formula to use?
· P = VI (when both V and I known)
· P = I²R (when I and R known)
· P = V²/R (when V and R known)
Commercial Unit of Electric Energy
1 kWh=1000 W×3600 s=3.6×10⁶ J
1 unit of electricity = 1 kWh = 3.6 × 10⁶ J
Cost
calculation:
Energy consumed (kWh) = Power (kW) × Time (hours)
Cost = Energy (kWh) × Rate per unit (₹/kWh)
Class 10 Science – Chapter: How Do Organisms Reproduce? complete notes
MCQs PYQ
1.
SI
unit of electric charge is:
(a) Ampere
(b) Volt
(c) Coulomb
(d) Ohm
Ans: (c)
Coulomb (CBSE 2020)
2.
Ohm's
law is applicable when:
(a) Temperature varies
(b) Temperature constant
(c) Resistance zero
(d) Current zero
Ans: (b)
Temperature constant (CBSE
2021)
3.
In
series combination, quantity that remains same:
(a) Voltage
(b) Power
(c) Current
(d) Resistance
Ans: (c)
Current (CBSE 2023)
4.
1
kWh equals:
(a) 1000 J
(b) 3600 J
(c) 3.6 × 10⁶ J
(d) 10⁶ J
Ans: (c)
3.6 × 10⁶ J (CBSE 2020)
5.
Nichrome
is used in heaters because of:
(a) Low resistivity
(b) High resistivity + high MP
(c) Low melting point
(d) High conductivity
Ans: (b)
High resistivity + high melting point (CBSE
2024)
6.
Power
formula P =:
(a) VI only
(b) I²R only
(c) V²/R only
(d) All three
Ans: (d)
All three (VI = I²R = V²/R) (CBSE
2023)
7.
Fuse
wire has low melting point because:
(a) Good conductor
(b) Melts quickly at excess current
(c) Low cost
(d) High resistance
Ans: (b)
Melts quickly at excess current (CBSE
2020)
8.
Resistivity
of a material depends on:
(a) Length only
(b) Area only
(c) Temperature and material
(d) Shape
Ans: (c)
Temperature and material (CBSE
2022)
9.
In
parallel combination, which remains same?
(a) Current
(b) Resistance
(c) Voltage
(d) Power
Ans: (c)
Voltage (CBSE 2023)
10.
Heat
produced by current given by:
(a) H = IRt
(b) H = I²Rt
(c) H = VRt
(d) H = I²R²t
Ans: (b)
H = I²Rt (CBSE 2020)
Class 10 Science – Chapter 6: Control and Coordination
Short
Answer Questions (PYQ)
Q1. State Ohm's law. Write its
mathematical form.
Ans: At constant temperature, current
through conductor is directly proportional to potential difference across ends →
V ∝ I →
V = IR. Slope of V-I graph = Resistance R.
Q2. Why series arrangement not used
in domestic circuits?
Ans: (1) Single break stops all
appliances. (2) Voltage divides, appliances get less than rated voltage. (3)
High total resistance → inefficient. (4) Cannot use
appliances independently.
Q3. Distinguish between ohmic and
non-ohmic conductors.
Ans: Ohmic: Follow V = IR at all values
(straight V-I graph); e.g., copper, aluminium. Non-ohmic: Don't follow Ohm's
law (curved V-I graph); resistance changes with voltage; e.g., diode, LED,
filament bulb.
Q4. What is a fuse?
Why is a low melting point material used?
Ans: Fuse is a safety device with a thin
wire of low melting alloy (tin-lead) in series with circuit. When excess
current flows, wire melts quickly → circuit breaks →
appliances protected.
Q5. Two bulbs rated 60W and 100W
used at 220V. Which has higher resistance?
Ans: R = V²/P. Higher wattage = lower resistance. R₆₀ = 220²/60 = 806.7 Ω, R₁₀₀ = 220²/100 = 484 Ω. 60W bulb has
higher resistance.
Chapter 6 Life Processes complete notes
Long Answer Questions (PYQ)
Q1. Three resistors 3Ω, 4Ω, 5Ω connected in series to 24V. Find: (a) Total R (b) Total I (c) Voltage across each (d) Power dissipated in each.
Solution:
(a) R_total = 3+4+5 = 12 Ω
(b) I = V/R = 24/12 = 2 A
(c) V₁ = 2×3 =
6 V, V₂ = 2×4 =
8 V, V₃ = 2×5 =
10 V (Check: 6+8+10 = 24 V ✓)
(d) P₁ = I²R₁ = 4×3 = 12 W, P₂ = 4×4 = 16 W, P₃ = 4×5 = 20 W
Q2. State Joule's law. An electric iron rated 1000W, 220V used 1.5h daily for 25 days. Find: (a) Resistance (b) Current (c) Total energy in kWh (d) Cost at ₹6/kWh.
Solution:
Joule's law: H = I²Rt (heat ∝
square of current × resistance × time)
(a) R = V²/P = 220²/1000 = 48.4 Ω
(b) I = P/V = 1000/220 = 4.55 A
(c) Daily energy = 1 kW × 1.5h = 1.5 kWh; Monthly = 1.5 × 25 = 37.5 kWh
(d) Cost = 37.5 × 6 = ₹225
Q3. Three resistors 2Ω, 3Ω, 6Ω connected in parallel to 12V. Find: (a) R_eq (b) Total I (c) I through each (d) Power of each.
Solution:
(a) 1/R_eq = 1/2+1/3+1/6 = 3/6+2/6+1/6 = 6/6 = 1 → R_eq
= 1 Ω
(b) I_total = V/R_eq = 12/1 = 12 A
(c) I₁ = 12/2
= 6 A, I₂ = 12/3
= 4 A, I₃ = 12/6
= 2 A (Check: 6+4+2 = 12 A ✓)
(d) P₁ = VI₁ = 12×6 = 72 W, P₂ = 12×4 = 48 W, P₃ = 12×2 = 24 W
Q4. Wire of resistance R is stretched to double its length. Find new resistance. How does resistivity change?
Solution:
Original: R = ρl/A (volume = lA = constant)
When stretched: new l' = 2l → volume constant →
new A' = A/2
New R' = ρ(2l)/(A/2) = ρ × 2l × 2/A = 4(ρl/A) = 4R
New resistance = 4 times original resistance
Resistivity does not change — it's a material property independent of
dimensions.
Q5. A house has: 5 LED bulbs (10W each), 2 fans (75W each), 1 refrigerator (150W, 24h), 1 iron (1000W, 1h). All other appliances used 8h/day for 30 days. Find: (a) Total energy consumed (b) Monthly bill at ₹8/kWh.
Solution:
Daily energy:
Bulbs: 5 × 10W × 8h = 400 Wh
Fans: 2 × 75W × 8h = 1200 Wh
Refrigerator: 150W × 24h = 3600 Wh
Iron: 1000W × 1h = 1000 Wh
Daily total = 400+1200+3600+1000 = 6200 Wh = 6.2 kWh
Monthly energy
= 6.2 × 30 = 186 kWh
Monthly bill = 186 × 8 = ₹1488
Conclusion
Electricity becomes completely manageable when divided into four skill areas: (1)
Ohm's law and resistance (V=IR, R=ρl/A — master the formula triangle, know
V/I/R relationships), (2) Series/parallel circuits (R_total and
current/voltage behavior — practice 10-15 circuit problems), (3) Heating
effect (H=I²Rt — three formula forms, applications: heater/bulb/fuse
materials and reasons), (4) Electric power and energy (P=VI=I²R=V²/R, 1
kWh = 3.6×10⁶ J, cost
calculations). NCERT emphasizes numerical problems above everything else —
series/parallel combination numericals (3-5 marks), power + cost calculations
(3-5 marks), and heating effect numericals (3 marks) appear in every board
paper. The key strategy: write given data clearly, choose correct formula,
apply correct units, and check answer plausibility. Most common mistakes are
wrong formula selection (P=VI vs P=I²R) and unit errors (watts vs kilowatts,
seconds vs hours).
Chapter 4 Carbon and its Compounds
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