A7 Resistance of A Wire
A7 Resistance of A Wire
A7 Resistance of A Wire
RESISTANCE OF A WIRE
II. MATERIALS
III. PROCEDURE
1. Wind the ϕ 0.25mm chrome-nickel wire onto the winding board. Set the winding board
using the clamping plugs. Use the screws to clamp each end firmly.
2. Build the circuit shown in Figure 7.1. Make sure to connect the positive and negative
terminals correctly and set the measuring ranges on the measuring instruments properly.
The switch should only be closed when a measurement is being made.
3. Select voltage level 1 (ca, 3V). Close the switch.
4. Tap the 6th winding using an alligator clip while bypassing the remaining 19 windings.
The length of the wire in each winding is 8cm.
5. Measure the voltage V and current I and record the measurements in Table 7.1
6. Repeat steps 4 and 5 for the 12th and 18th windings.
7. Remove the bypass lead from the circuit. Measure the voltage V and current I for 2 m (25
windings). Using Ohm’s Law, compute the resistance of the wire.
8. Plot the Resistance versus Length points.
9. Switch off the power supply and open the toggle switch.
10. Wind the ϕ 0.35 mm chrome-nickel wire onto the winding board, clamp the ends firmly
using the screws and fit the board back into the circuit.
11. Measure the voltage V and current I for 0.20 m (25 windings). Record in Table 7.2.
12. Replace the ϕ 0.35 mm chrome-nickel wire onto the winding board with the ϕ 0.35 mm
constantan and measure the voltage V and current I for 0.20 m (25 windings). Record in
Table 7.3.
13. Refer to the data in Table 7.3 and compute the resistivity of the chrome-nickel and
constantan wires using the equation:
A
ρ=R
L
where R = resistance of the wire
A= cross sectional area
14. Record the computed value as the experimental resistivity ρexp in Table 7.3.
15. Compute the percentage error using the equation:
ρtheo −ρexp
% error= x 100
ρtheo
VI. CONCLUSION
VII. CREDITS
VIII. REFERENCES