9 4
9 4
9 4
647
Equation (18-3) can be generalized to systems in which the current carriers are not
necessarily electrons, simply by replacing e with the charge of the carriers. In materials
called semiconductors, there may be both positive and negative carriers. The negative
carriers are electrons; the positive carriers are missing electrons (called holes) that act
as particles with charge +e. The electrons and holes drift in opposite directions; both
contribute to the current. Since the concentrations of electrons and holes may be different and they may have different drift speeds, the current is
I = n + eAv + + neAv
(18-4)
CHECKPOINT 18.3
Two copper wires with different diameters carry the same current. Compare the
drift speeds of the conduction electrons in the two wires.
When we turn on a light by flipping a wall switch, current flows through the lightbulb almost instantaneously. We do not have to wait for electrons to move from the
switch to the lightbulbwhich is a good thing, since it would be a long wait (see Example 18.2). Conduction electrons are present all along the wires that form the circuit.
When the switch is closed; the electric field extends into the entire circuit very quickly.
The electrons start to drift as soon as the electric field is nonzero.
Example 18.2
Drift Speed in Household Wiring
A #12 gauge copper wire, commonly used in household wiring, has a diameter of 2.053 mm. There are 8.00 1028 conduction electrons per cubic meter in copper. If the wire
carries a constant dc current of 5.00 A, what is the drift speed
of the electrons?
Strategy From the diameter, we can find the crosssectional area A of the wire. The number of conduction electrons per cubic meter is n in Eq. (18-3). Then Eq. (18-3)
enables us to solve for the drift speed.
A = p r 2 = _14 p d 2
The drift speed is given by
I =
v D = ____
neA
5.00 A
______________________________________________
8.00 1028 m3 1.602 1019 C _14 p (2.053 103 m)2
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