Electricity & Circuits
Electricity and Circuits
What you'll learn
- How electricity flows in a circuit — what is needed.
- Parts of a circuit: cell, bulb, switch, wires.
- Difference between conductors and insulators.
- Series and parallel circuits basics.
- Safety with electricity.
Key concepts
Sources of electricity
- Cell: a device that converts chemical energy to electrical energy; has a positive (+) and negative (−) terminal.
- Battery: two or more cells connected together.
- Other sources: generators, solar panels, fuel cells.
Cell symbol:
- Long thin line = positive (+) terminal.
- Short thick line = negative (−) terminal.
Electric circuit
- An electric circuit is a complete, closed path through which electric current can flow.
- Electric current: flow of electric charge (electrons) through a conductor.
- Current flows from the positive terminal of the cell, through the circuit, to the negative terminal.
Requirements for current to flow:
- A complete, unbroken (closed) circuit — any break stops current.
- A source of electricity (cell/battery).
- Conducting path (wires, components).
Components and their functions
| Component | Function |
|---|---|
| Cell / Battery | Source of electrical energy |
| Wire | Conducting path; carries current |
| Bulb (lamp) | Converts electrical energy to light (and heat) |
| Switch | Opens (breaks) or closes (completes) the circuit |
| Ammeter | Measures current (connected in series) |
Switch:
- Open switch: breaks the circuit → current cannot flow → bulb off.
- Closed switch: completes the circuit → current flows → bulb lights up.
Conductors and insulators
| Conductor | Insulator | |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | Allows electricity to flow freely | Does not allow electricity to flow |
| Examples | Copper, aluminium, iron, silver, gold, graphite, saltwater, human body | Plastic, rubber, wood, glass, air, dry paper, ceramic |
| Why | Free electrons available to carry charge | No free electrons |
| Uses | Wires, circuit connections | Wire covering, plugs, handles |
- Copper is the most common material for wires — excellent conductor; flexible; not too expensive.
- Rubber and plastic used to insulate wires — prevents electric shocks.
- The human body is a conductor → electricity can flow through us → never touch live wires.
Testing conductors and insulators:
- Make a circuit with a bulb and cell with two free wire ends.
- Touch the object to be tested between the free ends.
- Bulb glows → object is a conductor.
- Bulb doesn't glow → object is an insulator.
Series and parallel circuits (introduction)
Series circuit:
- All components connected in one loop, end-to-end.
- Same current flows through all components.
- If one component fails → whole circuit breaks → all bulbs go out.
- Example: old-style Christmas lights.
Parallel circuit:
- Components connected in separate branches.
- Same voltage (potential difference) across each branch.
- If one component fails → other branches still work.
- Example: household wiring — appliances work independently.
| Feature | Series | Parallel |
|---|---|---|
| Current path | One loop | Multiple branches |
| If one bulb fails | All go off | Others stay on |
| Brightness of bulbs | Less (current shared) | More (full voltage each) |
| Household wiring | No | Yes |
Electrical safety
- Never touch electrical equipment with wet hands.
- Never insert fingers or objects into electric sockets.
- Always use insulated (plastic/rubber covered) wires.
- Switch off appliances before repairing.
- Fuse: a safety device — thin wire melts if current is too high, breaking circuit and preventing fire or damage.
- Don't overload sockets — too many appliances → too much current → danger.
- Lightning conductor: tall metal rod on buildings; provides safe path for lightning to reach earth.
Quick check
- What is needed for an electric current to flow?
- What is the difference between a conductor and an insulator? Give two examples of each.
- Explain what happens when a switch is opened in a circuit.
- Compare series and parallel circuits — give one advantage of each.
- Why is copper used for electric wires and plastic used to cover them?
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Electricity and Circuits.
3 topics • Notes • Practice • AI explanations available
For generative engines & students
Every topic page delivers structured HTML (headings, lists, tables, takeaways) in the first response. Perfect for citations in AI overviews and fast scanning by students and parents.
