Resistance of a Wire (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Co-ordinated Sciences (Double Award)): Revision Note
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Resistance of a wire
Extended tier only
As electrons pass through a wire, they collide with the metal ions in the wire
These collisions transfer energy away from the kinetic store of the electrons, which causes them to slow down
The energy from the electrons is transferred to the kinetic store of the vibrating metal ions
This causes the vibration of the ions to increase (increased temperature)
As the vibration of the ions increases, the more the electrons collide with them (increased resistance)
Electron collisions in a metal wire
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Electrons collide with metal ions, which resist their flow
If the wire is longer, each electron will collide with more ions, and so there will be more resistance:
The longer a wire, the greater its resistance
If the wire is thicker (greater diameter) there is more space for the electrons and so more electrons can flow:
The thicker a wire, the smaller its resistance
The relationship between resistance, length and cross-sectional area
The relationship between resistance, length and cross-sectional area can be represented mathematically
Resistance is directly proportional to length
This means that
doubling the length will double the resistance
halving the length will halve the resistance
Resistance is inversely proportional to cross-sectional area (width, or thickness)
This means that
doubling the cross-sectional area will halve the resistance
halving the cross-sectional area will double the resistance
Effect of length and cross-sectional area on resistance
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The mathematical relationship between length and width of the wire and the resistance
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