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Block 02 — Electric charge and current

  • Define electric charge $Q$ and explain its quantization in multiples of the elementary charge $e$.
  • Distinguish positive and negative charges, their interactions, and typical carriers (electrons, ions).
  • Define electric current $I$ as rate of charge flow; relate $I$ to moving charge via $I = \frac{{\rm d}Q}{{\rm d}t}$.
  • Apply the unit check for $1~\rm A = 1~C/s$ and recall typical current magnitudes (pA … kA).
  • Explain and consistently use the conventional current direction.
  • Identify and sketch the symbols of the ideal current and voltage source.
  1. Warm-up (5–10 min): Recall of SI units from Block 01; estimate “How many electrons per second flow at $1~\rm A$?”
  2. Core concepts & derivations (60–70 min):
    1. Electric charge: definition, elementary charge, Coulomb’s law (overview only).
    2. Charge carriers in metals vs. electrolytes.
    3. Electric current: definition, instantaneous and average values, unit check.
    4. Typical magnitudes; conventional vs. electron flow.
    5. Ideal current source, symbol, and U–I diagram.
  3. Practice (10–20 min): Quick calculations and sim-based exercises.
  4. Wrap-up (5 min): Summary and pitfalls.
  1. Charge $Q$ is the fundamental “substance” of electricity, always in multiples of the elementary charge.
  2. Like charges repel, unlike charges attract; forces are described by Coulomb’s law (detail in Block 09).
  3. Current $I$ quantifies *how fast* charge moves: $1~\rm A$ = $1~C/s$.
  4. Convention: we follow conventional current direction (positive charge motion, from $+$ to $-$), even though in metals electrons move oppositely.
  5. Ideal current sources deliver a fixed current regardless of load voltage — a useful abstraction for circuit analysis.
  6. This block connects Block 01 (units) to Block 03 (voltage and resistance), and prepares for Kirchhoff’s laws in Block 04.

Abb. ##: Atomic model according to Bohr / Sommerfeld electrical_engineering_and_electronics_1:atommodell.svg

  • Electric charge $Q$ is a physical quantity indicating the amount of excess or deficit of electrons or ions.
  • the charge is based on the electron shell and the atomic nucleus, see the atomic model of Bohr and Sommerfeld in Abbildung ##
  • Due to the electrons and protons it is quantized in multiples of the elementary charge:

\begin{align*} e &= 1.602 \cdot 10^{-19}~\rm C \\ Q &= n \cdot e \end{align*}

with $n \in \mathbb{Z}$.

* Positive charge: deficiency of electrons (e.g. ionized atoms). * Negative charge: excess electrons.

\begin{align*} [Q] = 1~\rm C = 1~A \cdot s \end{align*}

Example / micro-exercise

How many electrons correspond to a charge of $1~\rm C$? \begin{align*} n = \frac{Q}{e} = \frac{1~\rm C}{1.602\cdot 10^{-19}~\rm C} \approx 6.24 \cdot 10^{18} \end{align*}

An electric current arises when charges move in a preferred direction. The instantaneous current is defined as

\begin{align*} i(t) = \frac{{\rm d}Q}{{\rm d}t} \end{align*}

Unit check:

\begin{align*} [i] &= \frac{[Q]}{[t]} = \frac{1~\rm C}{1~\rm s} = 1~\rm A \end{align*}

* In metals: flow of electrons. * In electrolytes: movement of ions. * In semiconductors: electrons and holes.

Convention

In this course, we always use the conventional current direction: positive from $+$ to $-$. Electron flow is opposite.

Typical current magnitudes

  • $10~\rm pA$ — control current in a FET gate
  • $10~\rm \mu A$ — sensitive sensor output
  • $10~\rm mA$ — LED or small sensor supply
  • $10~\rm A$ — heating device
  • $10~\rm kA$ — large generator output

From circuit theory, we abstract the ideal current source:

  • Delivers a fixed current $I_s$, independent of load voltage.
  • Symbol: circle with arrow.
  • U–I characteristic: vertical line at $I = I_s$.

Abb. ##: ideal current source electrical_engineering_and_electronics_1:idealestromquelle.svg

Task 2.1: Counting charges in a current

A flashlight bulb is supplied with $I=0.25~\rm A$. How many electrons pass through the filament in one second?

Strategy

Use $n=\frac{I \cdot t}{e}$ with $t=1~\rm s$.

Solution

\begin{align*} n = \frac{0.25~\rm C}{1.602 \cdot 10^{-19}~\rm C} \approx 1.6 \cdot 10^{18} \end{align*}

Task 2.2: Simulation — observe current direction

Open the circuit sim and flip the battery polarity. Observe current arrow and electron movement.

Task 2.3: Identify source symbols

Sketch and label the symbols for an ideal voltage source and an ideal current source. Which one enforces a fixed $U$, which one enforces a fixed $I$?



Charge in Matter

  1. Electric charge $Q$ is quantized in multiples of $e=1.602\cdot 10^{-19}~\rm C$.
  2. Current $I = \frac{{\rm d}Q}{{\rm d}t}$; $1~\rm A = 1~C/s$.
  3. Conventional current direction runs from $+$ to $-$. Electron flow is opposite.
  4. Typical currents range from pA (sensors) to kA (power generators).
  5. Ideal current sources supply fixed current independent of load.
  6. Pitfalls:
    • Mixing electron flow vs. conventional current.
    • Forgetting unit checks ($\rm A = C/s$).
    • Misinterpreting current as “speed” rather than rate of charge flow.