I am reading a basic electronics book: "There are no Electrons: Electronics for Earthlings" and I came across a clever passage about the fact that you need a closed circuit in order for current to flow. Here is the passage I am curious about: Contact online >>
I am reading a basic electronics book: "There are no Electrons: Electronics for Earthlings" and I came across a clever passage about the fact that you need a closed circuit in order for current to flow. Here is the passage I am curious about:
Does anyone have a straight-forward answer to this question?
The confusion here is from the initial poor description of how a battery works.
A battery consists of three things: a positive electrode, a negative electrode, and an electrolyte in between. The electrodes are made of materials that strongly want to react with each other; they are kept apart by the electrolyte.
The electrolyte acts like a filter that blocks the flow of electrons, but allows ions (positively charged atoms from the electrodes) to pass through. If the battery is not connected to anything, the chemical force is pulling on the ions, trying to draw them across the electrolyte to complete the reaction, but this is balanced by the electrostatic force-- the voltage between the electrodes. Remember-- a voltage between two points means there is an electric field between those points which pushes charged particles in one direction.
When you add a wire between the ends of the batteries, electrons can pass through the wire, driven by the voltage. This reduces the electrostatic force, so ions can pass through the electrolyte. As the battery is discharged, ions move from one electrode to the other, and the chemical reaction proceeds until one of the electrodes is used up.
Thinking about two batteries next to each other, linked by one wire-- there is no voltage between the two batteries, so there is no force to drive electrons. In each battery, the electrostatic force balances the chemical force, and the battery stays at steady state.
(I kind of glossed over what it means for two materials to "want" to react with each other. Google "Gibbs free energy" for more details on that. You might also google "Nernst equation.")
Forget the batteries for a second, thats just one of a thousand analogies you could use to describe voltage/current and the reason that no current flows has nothing to do with the electro-chemical properties of batteries, its far simpler.
In your battery example, there is no return current path so no current will flow. There is obviously a more deep physics reason for why this works but as the question asked for a simple answer I''ll skip the math, google Maxwell''s Equations and how they are used in the derivation of Kirchhoff''s voltage law.
Batteries do make a good example for this simply because they are current sources with completely isolated grounds. This example would be equally true of any other power source with a completely isolated "ground".
However, this is not an easy thing to find, for instance doing this with 2 bench supplies would likely make one of the bench supplies very unhappy, but thats not because the effect is different, the difference is that the bench supplies are likely both grounded to the electrical wiring in the building and as such there is a return path for current to flow through.
Now if you were to connect the pipe in a loop and hit the switch the pumps would spin up (voltage) and water would flow (current).
If you connected both pumps pointing in the same direction you would get more water pressure (voltage) because the pumps are helping each other out (2 batteries in series).
It''s important to remember that a voltage is not an absolute value. It''s a relative value. The B- _ A+ wire will be at one potential, and B+ and A- are relative to that potential.
I too have always found that the traditional layman''s description of a battery to be misleading. Most people describe a battery as a storage container for electricity, but that doesn''t explain why you can''t dump the electricity from a battery to the ground, or why you can''t have one battery feed another, like in your question above.
This may not be an accurate description of what is actually happening, but I find that a more understandable analogy is to describe a battery as a pump instead. The "energy" contained in the battery is used to drive the pump; it is not sent out over the wire. With this analogy, it is plainly obvious why both the positive and negative ends of a battery must be connected in a circuit. If, say, you connect only the negative electrode to ground, there is no current because there is no electricity coming in on the positive electrode that can be pumped out.
Technically, current may or may not flow when a wire is connected that way. It all depends on whether or not there is a potential difference in charges between those two terminals. If the difference is small, little/no current will flow. This holds true for any wire connected between any two terminals, anywhere.
However, current more than likely won''t (depending upon the age/use of the battery). The reason why is because the voltage potential difference - the "excess holes on the positive end" and the "excess electrons on the negative end" - is relative to a given battery. There are excess electrons/holes on the ends of a given battery with respect to each other. That relationship may or may not hold true between one battery''s negative terminal and another''s positive terminal.
The current that flows into a junction is always equal to the current that flows out of the junction.Therefore, current must always flow in a loop.
I think another thing which might be confusing you is that we say the voltage in a conductor is always constant. While this is mostly true it is kind of a lie. All conductors still have a finite resistance. Because of this if you hook up a wire between the two terminals of a battery one end of the wire will actually be at a different potential then the other and the current in the wire will follow ohms law. I don''t know if you''ve ever tried shorting the two terminals of a battery like this but because the resistance of the wire is so low ohms law gives a very large current which will heat up the wire and burn you.
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