To study the relationship between the length, cross-sectional area, and total resistance of a resistor. To determine the resistivity of a particular material.
Discussion:
The resistance of a rectangular resistor is given
by R = rL/A where
L is the length in the direction of current flow, A is the cross-sectional
area perpendicular to the current flow, and r
is the resistivity. The resistivity is a property of the material and does
not depend on how much material there is or what geometrical shape it is
in. The cross-sectional area is given by A = WT where W is the width and
T is the thickness. You will verify the formula for R in two steps. First
you will show that if A is kept constant, R is proportional to L. Then
you will show that if L is kept constant, R is inversely proportional to
A.
The resistive material you will be using in this
experiment is the carbon impregnated paper which you used in the equipotential
drawing experiment. You will be using relatively narrow strips of this
paper in order to insure that the current follows a relatively straight
path.
You will be using a VOM (Volt-Ohm-Milliammeter)
to measure resistances. Notice that the resistance scale decreases from
'infinity' on the left to 0 on the right. When the VOM is set to measure
resistance it is actually responding to the current which passes through
the resistor as a result of the potential difference provided by a battery
inside the VOM. The resistance scale has been marked in such a way that
resistance is read directly instead of being computed from the known battery
voltage and measured current.
Materials:
Multimeter (analog or digital)
strips of carbon impregnated paper from equipotential
lab
micrometer
paper clips
Procedure:
As a rough check on the experiment, compare the resistivities
calculated in steps 3 and 5.
Remember % difference = X 100