SCIENCE Grade 10: Quarter 2 - Module 7
SCIENCE Grade 10: Quarter 2 - Module 7
SCIENCE Grade 10: Quarter 2 - Module 7
Department of Education
Regional Office IX, Zamboanga Peninsula
SCIENCE Grade 10
Quarter 2 – Module 7
Simple Electric Motors and
Generators
In this lesson, you will learn about the relationship between electricity and
magnetism in electric motors and generators. You will eventually be able to explain how
electric motors and generators operate (S10FE-IIj-54).
Specifically, you will:
What’s In
In the previous weeks, you were introduced to the electromagnetic spectrum and
got to know the practical applications of the different regions of the Electromagnetic
waves, such as the use of radio waves in telecommunications, and the use of visible light
in image formation in optical instruments like lenses and mirrors. This time, you will learn
how the concept of electromagnetism is used in simple electric motors and generators.
You will also be challenged to build a simple electric motor and explain how it operates
as well as how this concept is currently applied in various forms of technology.
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Activity 1: Electric Motors at Home.
Score:
Directions: For an easy start, identify some home appliances ______
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that use electric motors. Listed on the box are home devices and below
it is the short description/s on how the electric motor functions in a device.
Your task is to write the home devices/appliances on the first column, beside the function
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of the motor that matches the device. On the third column, indicate the useful
output for each device. Some items have already been answered. It is now your task to
finish the job.
b. Fan (floor fan, table fan, ceiling fan etc.) h. Garbage disposal in sink
c. Computer disk drive and hard drive i. Hair dryer (blow dryer)
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Electric drill Spins drill bit Mechanical
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Spins floppy and hard drive disks
3
Spins propeller or vanes to circulate air
4 Spins beater to mix food
5 Spins a large drum to wash and remove
water from clothes
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Spins a wheel to move needle and
Mechanical
thread up and down
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Spins small fan to blow hot air out
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Spins blade to grind up food wastes
9 Food blender/coffee Mechanical
grinder Spins blade to chop or grind food
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Spins fan inside to suck air and dirt
Table 1: Electric Motors in home appliances
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What’s New
Read over your answer regarding the home devices/ items in activity 1-
Electric Motors at Home. Notice that all of these items use electric energy to power its
electric motor. What is the form of the output energy as depicted in the short description
of the devices? If you were able to correctly answer this, chances are that you can already
identify the main function of electric motors.
Understanding how electric motors and generators work and identifying how they
are used will help you realize the central role that motors and generators play in producing
and using electricity for various purposes. Try this next activity to learn more about electric
motors and generators.
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Key Question: How is energy converted in electric motors and generators? Write your
answer on the space provided. (4 points)
_____________________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________________
What Is It
Electric motors are made in a wide range of sizes and are used to run things
ranging from toys to home appliances and to heavy industrial machinery and urban
subway trains. The efficiency of electric motors is high; small motors convert electricity
into motion with 60 to 75 percent efficiency, while large motors have efficiencies as high
as 90 to 97 percent. Motors can be made to use electricity produced by batteries and
solar cells (photovoltaic cells) or the electricity produced by an electric utility’s power
plants and distributed by its transmission lines. These characteristics have led to the
widespread use of electric motors for many purposes.
Now there are energy resources that an electric utility might use to produce
electricity. It includes coal, oil, natural gas, nuclear energy, wind, falling water, and solar
cells. Excluding solar cells, the energy contained in all of these resources is converted
into electricity using an electric generator. An electric generator is a device that converts
mechanical energy into electrical energy; it is essentially an electric motor being run in
the opposite way. The energy conversions in the motor (electrical energy to mechanical
energy) are the reverse of those in the generator (mechanical energy to electrical energy).
In fact, many electric motors and generators are built the same way and can be used
interchangeably. Mechanical energy can be transferred to small generators through the
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use of gears or belts attached to pulleys, much like those connecting a car’s engine to its
alternator (a type of generator). Large generators used in electricity production are
connected to turbines—devices consisting of vanes or blades attached to a wheel or set
of wheels mounted on a shaft. A substance such as pressurized steam, water, or air
strikes the turbine blades, spinning the turbine and the generator together. Power plants
that burn fossil or nuclear fuels heat water to produce pressurized steam to drive the
turbine and generator. Hydroelectric dams use falling water, and wind turbines use wind
pushing on propellers for the same purpose. Shown on page 6 and 7 are diagrams of
power plants’ usage of electric motors and generators. Like electric motors, generators
come in many sizes, ranging from the generators bicycles use to light a small headlamp
to the large generators power plants use to produce electricity. Power plant generators
are extremely efficient, converting up to 99 percent of mechanical energy into electrical
energy. (However, the high efficiency of electric power plant generators should not be
confused with the overall power plant efficiency, which is about 33 percent.) In activity 2,
you should notice that nearly all power plants produce electricity using generators. In turn,
much of the electricity produced by generators is used by electric motors found in various
gadgets like those in home appliances. This system is made possible by electric
generators and motors—two simple, versatile devices that are actually the mirror images
of one another.
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Score:
______
10
What’s More
Activity 3: Build Me Up. A simple electric motor is shown below. Identify at least 5
10 of a simple
items/materials found in the figure which may be relevant to the construction
electric motor and name a possible material which may be used as an alternative (10
points). You may also construct your own version of electric motors when materials are
available in your area and take a video of yourself with your self-constructed working simple
electric motor and submit the video clip to your science teacher. (10 bonus points).
Source: https://www.khanacademy.org/science/high-school-physics/dc-circuits/x2a2d643227022488:explore-electric-motors/v/build-your-own-motor
2.
3.
4.
5.
Procedure:
Warning! Disconnect the DC motor model immediately after making observations.
1. Wind the copper wire into a coil about 1 inch (2.5 cm) in diameter. Make four or
five loops. Wrap the ends of the wire around the coil a couple of times on opposite
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sides to hold the coil together. Leave 2 inches (5 cm) projecting from each side of
the coil and cut off any extra wire.
2. If you are using insulated wire, use the wire strippers to strip the insulation off
the ends of the wire projecting from the coil. If you are using enameled wire, use
the sandpaper to remove the enamel.
3. Position the washer/ paper clip opposite yet in level with each such that it can
hold the coil of wire as shown in the figure.
4. Use the alligator clip leads to connect the battery or power supply to the paper
clips, connecting one terminal of the battery to one paper clip and the other terminal
to the other paper clip
5. Testing of Model – Carefully pile with the three neodymium/ axial magnets and
the battery on a level surface. Mount the shaped wire, with its pivot part as a
rotating point, over the positive terminal of the battery. Check that the bottom ends
of the wire curl loosely around the magnets forming a closed circuit. You now have
a simple DC electric motor model that we will simply call a DC motor model. Give
the current-carrying shaped wire a gentle spin.
Observe and record what happens to the coil of wire. If your DC motor does not
work, stretch your tolerance, abilities, and knowledge. Have fun making your motor model
demonstrate the relationship between electricity and magnetism.
Score:
What I Have Learned ______
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Activity 4: Sum it Up challenge.
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Score:
______
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What I Can Do
Activity 5: Sketch me a picture. Choose any of the 2 tasks to accomplish. You may
use the format provided below or attach a separate sheet for your output. 10
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Score:
Assessment ______
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Multiple Choice:
Directions: Write the letter of the best answer on the space provided.
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d. Magnets, coil of wire, bulbs, connecting wires, paper clips, washers
_____6. Which electrical appliance has an electric motor?
a. Printer
b. Television
c. Light bulbs
d. Induction cooker
_____7. Which of the statements is not true in building simple electric motors?
a. Both ends of the coil of wire should be stripped.
b. Circuit should be closed for the electric motor to spin.
c. Voltage source does not affect the actual spin of the coil.
d. Axial magnets can be an alternative for neodymium magnets.
_____8. Which energy source may not necessarily make use of generator in converting
energy to electricity?
a. Fossil Fuel
b. Geo thermal
c. Hydro electric
d. Solar/ Photovoltaic cells
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Additional Activity Score:
______
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Activity 6: Trace E.
Trace the energy conversion of a geothermal power plant and a
hydro-electric power plant from energy input/source to energy output. You may refer to
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the diagram in activity 2 or do an additional research online to accomplish this task. (5
points each)
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Activity 3
Activity1
1. Electric drill ,
1. Coil and magnetic
2. Computer disk drive wire
PRE- ASSESSMENT AND 3. Fan 2. Washers/paper
POST-ASESSMENT 4. Mixer clip
5. Clothes washer/dryer
6. Sewing Machine 3. Magnets
7. Hair dryer/blower 4. Connecting wires
1. A 8. Garbage disposal in sink 5. Battery/electricity
9. Food blender/coffee
2. A grinder source
10. Vacuum cleaner
3. D Activity 4
4. A for 1-10 the Useful
Energy output is 1-2. Electric motor
5. C Mechanical energy and generator
6. A 3. electricity
Activity 2 4. electrical
7. C
5. mechanical
8. D
1. Electrical
6.generator
2. Mechanical
9. B 7. electrical energy
3. Mechanical
8. generator
10. D 4. Electrical
5. Electric motor
6. generator
Answer Key -Gr10Q2W7 Science
References
Deped. (2010). Learning Module in Science 10. Deped.
Deped.gov.ph. (2020). Retrieved from https://www.deped.gov.ph/wp-
content/uploads/2020/06/DO_s2020_012.pdf
Point, U. o.-S. (2020, August 31). uwsp.edu. Retrieved from Wisconsin K-12 Energy Education Program
(KEEP) - Wisconsin Center for Environmental Education - University of Wisconsin-Stevens Poin:
https://www.uwsp.edu/cnr-ap/KEEP/Documents/Activities/Electric_Motors_Generators.pdf
Florencio R. Caballero, DTE Deja a la luna verme con luz tranquila y suave,
Adiós, padres y hermanos, trozos del alma mía,
Amigos de la infancia en el perdido hogar,
EPS-LRMDS Deja que el alba envíe su resplandor fugaz, Dar gracias que descanso del fatigoso día;
Deja gemir al viento con su murmullo grave, Adiós, dulce extranjera, mi amiga, mi alegría,
Y si desciende y posa sobre mi cruz un ave, Adiós, queridos seres, morir es descansar.
Sandy R. Albarico Deja que el ave entone su cántico de paz.
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