Starter quiz
- What is the p.d. across the 10 Ω resistor?
- 1 V
- 2 V ✓
- 3 V
- 4 V
-
- Which of these components only allows current to flow in one direction?
- resistor
- filament lamp
- light emitting diode ✓
- motor
-
- Which statement is correct about this circuit?
- Increasing the resistance of the resistor increases the p.d across it. ✓
- Increasing the resistance of the resistor increases the p.d across the lamp.
- Decreasing the resistance of the resistor increases the p.d across it.
- Decreasing the resistance of the resistor increases the p.d across the lamp. ✓
-
- What happens to the current in the circuit when the resistance of the variable resistor is increased?
- the current increases
- the current stays the same
- the current decreases ✓
-
- Which of these components has to get hot to work effectively?
- a diode
- a motor
- a filament lamp ✓
- a fuse ✓
- a resistor
-
- What happens to the resistance of a length of fine wire in a circuit if it is removed, folded in two and then reconnected in the circuit?
- the resistance doubles
- the resistance stays the same
- the resistance halves
- the resistance is a quarter if the original ✓
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Exit quiz
- Which of these components is sensitive to light?
- a thermistor
- a diode
- a LDR ✓
- an ammeter
-
- Which of these components is sensitive to temperature?
- a thermistor ✓
- a fuse
- a filament lamp
- a diode
-
- What does this symbol represent?
- a resistor
- a fuse
- a light dependent resistor
- a thermistor ✓
-
- What does this electrical component do?
- it reacts to different volumes of sound
- it reacts to different strengths of magnetic field
- it reacts to different brightnesses of light ✓
- it reacts to different temperatures
-
- What do the arrows in the circuit symbol represent?
- light shining on the component ✓
- sound reaching the component
- heat reaching the component
- an electric field reaching the component
-
- What does this circuit symbol represent?
- a diode
- an LED
- an LDR ✓
- a variable resistor
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Worksheet
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Presentation
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Video
Lesson Details
Key learning points
- An LDR is made of a semiconductor, and the brighter the light shining on it, the lower its resistance.
- Light transfers energy that enables electrons in a semiconductor to move as they do in a metal conductor.
- A thermistor is made of a semiconductor, and the hotter it is, the lower its resistance.
- Heating transfers energy that enables electrons in a semiconductor to move as they do in a metal conductor.
- A potential divider circuit can be set up with an LDR/thermistor to trigger a switch if it becomes too dark or too cold.
Common misconception
Circuits are analysed sequentially, starting at the battery and working round, one component at a time.
Ask questions that prompt pupils to consider the effect of changes to one component on the whole circuit.
Keywords
Light-dependent resistor - a semiconducting component with a resistance that gets lower in increasingly bright light
Semiconductor - a material that has both metallic and non-metallic properties
Thermistor - a semiconducting component with a resistance that gets lower in increasingly high temperatures
Potential divider - a series circuit that divides the p.d. across a power supply into two or more smaller voltages
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