Voltage and Current | Basic Concepts Of Electricity | Electronics Textbook

Read about Voltage and Current (Basic Concepts Of Electricity) in our free Electronics Textbook

Overview

Added

March 18, 2026

Subject & domain

physics · dc-circuits

Grade range

Grade 7–Grade 12 (Senior)

Page kind

Article

Introduction

Understanding Voltage and Current

  • The Necessity of Force: A continuous path (circuit) is insufficient for charge flow; an influencing force is required to push charge carriers through the circuit.
  • Charge Imbalance: Similar to static electricity, an imbalance of electrons (e.g., rubbing wax and wool) creates a force. When a conductor bridges this imbalance, electrons flow to neutralize the charge.
  • Potential Energy Analogy:
    • Water Reservoir: Pumping water to a high reservoir stores potential energy. Gravity provides the force to move water back down through a pipe.
    • Electricity: "Pumping" electrons away from their natural balance creates potential energy. Providing a conductive path allows this energy to be released as charge flow.
  • Defining Voltage:
    • Voltage is a measure of potential energy per unit charge (specific potential energy).
    • It is the work required to move a unit charge against the force trying to keep charges balanced.
    • Because it represents potential energy relative to a position, voltage is always measured between two points and is often referred to as a "voltage drop."
  • Voltage Generation: Beyond static friction, voltage can be produced via:
    • Chemical reactions: Batteries.
    • Radiant energy: Solar cells.
    • Magnetism: Generators/alternators.
  • Circuit Mechanics:
    • A voltage source has two contact points.
    • The battery symbol uses long and short lines to denote polarity: the long line is positive (+), and the short line is negative (-).
    • By convention, charge carriers are treated as positive, moving from the positive terminal to the negative terminal.
    • Requirement for Flow: A continuous, closed loop (circuit) is mandatory for charge to flow; without a return path, the potential energy remains stored but inactive.

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