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College Physics for AP® Courses 2e

20.3 Resistance and Resistivity

College Physics for AP® Courses 2e20.3 Resistance and Resistivity

Learning Objectives

By the end of this section, you will be able to:

  • Explain the concept of resistivity.
  • Use resistivity to calculate the resistance of specified configurations of material.
  • Use the thermal coefficient of resistivity to calculate the change of resistance with temperature.

Material and Shape Dependence of Resistance

The resistance of an object depends on its shape and the material of which it is composed. The cylindrical resistor in Figure 20.10 is easy to analyze, and, by so doing, we can gain insight into the resistance of more complicated shapes. As you might expect, the cylinder’s electric resistance RR is directly proportional to its length LL, similar to the resistance of a pipe to fluid flow. The longer the cylinder, the more collisions charges will make with its atoms. The greater the diameter of the cylinder, the more current it can carry (again similar to the flow of fluid through a pipe). In fact, RR is inversely proportional to the cylinder’s cross-sectional area AA.

A cylindrical conductor of length L and cross section A is shown. The resistivity of the cylindrical section is represented as rho. The resistance of this cross section R is equal to rho L divided by A. The section of length L of cylindrical conductor is shown equivalent to a resistor represented by symbol R.
Figure 20.10 A uniform cylinder of length LL and cross-sectional area AA. Its resistance to the flow of current is similar to the resistance posed by a pipe to fluid flow. The longer the cylinder, the greater its resistance. The larger its cross-sectional area AA, the smaller its resistance.

For a given shape, the resistance depends on the material of which the object is composed. Different materials offer different resistance to the flow of charge. We define the resistivity ρρ of a substance so that the resistance RR of an object is directly proportional to ρρ. Resistivity ρρ is an intrinsic property of a material, independent of its shape or size. The resistance RR of a uniform cylinder of length LL, of cross-sectional area AA, and made of a material with resistivity ρρ, is

R=ρLA.R=ρLA.
20.18

Table 20.1 gives representative values of ρρ. The materials listed in the table are separated into categories of conductors, semiconductors, and insulators, based on broad groupings of resistivities. Conductors have the smallest resistivities, and insulators have the largest; semiconductors have intermediate resistivities. Conductors have varying but large free charge densities, whereas most charges in insulators are bound to atoms and are not free to move. Semiconductors are intermediate, having far fewer free charges than conductors, but having properties that make the number of free charges depend strongly on the type and amount of impurities in the semiconductor. These unique properties of semiconductors are put to use in modern electronics, as will be explored in later chapters.

Material Resistivity ρ ρ ( Ω m Ω m )
Conductors
Silver 1 . 59 × 10 8 1 . 59 × 10 8
Copper 1 . 72 × 10 8 1 . 72 × 10 8
Gold 2 . 44 × 10 8 2 . 44 × 10 8
Aluminum 2 . 65 × 10 8 2 . 65 × 10 8
Tungsten 5 . 6 × 10 8 5 . 6 × 10 8
Iron 9 . 71 × 10 8 9 . 71 × 10 8
Platinum 10 . 6 × 10 8 10 . 6 × 10 8
Steel 20 × 10 8 20 × 10 8
Lead 22 × 10 8 22 × 10 8
Manganin (Cu, Mn, Ni alloy) 44 × 10 8 44 × 10 8
Constantan (Cu, Ni alloy) 49 × 10 8 49 × 10 8
Mercury 96 × 10 8 96 × 10 8
Nichrome (Ni, Fe, Cr alloy) 100 × 10 8 100 × 10 8
Semiconductors1
Carbon (pure) 3.5 × 10 –5 3.5 × 10 –5
Carbon ( 3.5 60 ) × 10 –5 ( 3.5 60 ) × 10 –5
Germanium (pure) 600×103600×103
Germanium (1600)×103(1600)×103
Silicon (pure) 2300 2300
Silicon 0.1–2300 0.1–2300
Insulators
Amber 5 × 10 14 5 × 10 14
Glass 10 9 10 14 10 9 10 14
Lucite >10 13 >10 13
Mica 10 11 10 15 10 11 10 15
Quartz (fused) 75 × 10 16 75 × 10 16
Rubber (hard) 10 13 10 16 10 13 10 16
Sulfur 10 15 10 15
Teflon >10 13 >10 13
Wood 10 8 10 11 10 8 10 11
Table 20.1 Resistivities ρ ρ of Various materials at 20º C 20º C

Example 20.5

Calculating Resistor Diameter: A Headlight Filament

A car headlight filament is made of tungsten and has a cold resistance of 0.350Ω0.350Ω. If the filament is a cylinder 4.00 cm long (it may be coiled to save space), what is its diameter?

Strategy

We can rearrange the equation R=ρLAR=ρLA to find the cross-sectional area AA of the filament from the given information. Then its diameter can be found by assuming it has a circular cross-section.

Solution

The cross-sectional area, found by rearranging the expression for the resistance of a cylinder given in R=ρLAR=ρLA, is

A=ρLR.A=ρLR.
20.19

Substituting the given values, and taking ρρ from Table 20.1, yields

A = ( 5.6 × 10 –8 Ω m ) ( 4.00 × 10 –2 m ) 0.350 Ω = 6.40 × 10 –9 m 2 . A = ( 5.6 × 10 –8 Ω m ) ( 4.00 × 10 –2 m ) 0.350 Ω = 6.40 × 10 –9 m 2 .
20.20

The area of a circle is related to its diameter DD by

A=πD24.A=πD24.
20.21

Solving for the diameter DD, and substituting the value found for AA, gives

D = 2 A π 1 2 = 2 6.40 × 10 –9 m 2 3.14 1 2 = 9.0 × 10 –5 m. D = 2 A π 1 2 = 2 6.40 × 10 –9 m 2 3.14 1 2 = 9.0 × 10 –5 m.
20.22

Discussion

The diameter is just under a tenth of a millimeter. It is quoted to only two digits, because ρρ is known to only two digits.

Temperature Variation of Resistance

The resistivity of all materials depends on temperature. Some even become superconductors (zero resistivity) at very low temperatures. (See Figure 20.11.) Conversely, the resistivity of conductors increases with increasing temperature. Since the atoms vibrate more rapidly and over larger distances at higher temperatures, the electrons moving through a metal make more collisions, effectively making the resistivity higher. Over relatively small temperature changes (about 100ºC100ºC or less), resistivity ρρ varies with temperature change ΔTΔT as expressed in the following equation

ρ=ρ0(1 +αΔT),ρ=ρ0(1 +αΔT),
20.23

where ρ0ρ0 is the original resistivity and αα is the temperature coefficient of resistivity. (See the values of αα in Table 20.2 below.) For larger temperature changes, αα may vary or a nonlinear equation may be needed to find ρρ. Note that αα is positive for metals, meaning their resistivity increases with temperature. Some alloys have been developed specifically to have a small temperature dependence. Manganin (which is made of copper, manganese and nickel), for example, has αα close to zero (to three digits on the scale in Table 20.2), and so its resistivity varies only slightly with temperature. This is useful for making a temperature-independent resistance standard, for example.

A graph for variation of resistance R with temperature T for a mercury sample is shown. The temperature T is plotted along the x axis and is measured in Kelvin, and the resistance R is plotted along the y axis and is measured in ohms. The curve starts at x equals zero and y equals zero, and coincides with the X axis until the value of temperature is four point two Kelvin, known as the critical temperature T sub c. At temperature T sub c, the curve shows a vertical rise, represented by a dotted line, until the resistance is about zero point one one ohms. After this temperature the resistance shows a nearly linear increase with temperature T.
Figure 20.11 The resistance of a sample of mercury is zero at very low temperatures—it is a superconductor up to about 4.2 K. Above that critical temperature, its resistance makes a sudden jump and then increases nearly linearly with temperature.
Material Coefficient αα(1/°C)2
Conductors
Silver 3 . 8 × 10 3 3 . 8 × 10 3
Copper 3 . 9 × 10 3 3 . 9 × 10 3
Gold 3 . 4 × 10 3 3 . 4 × 10 3
Aluminum 3 . 9 × 10 3 3 . 9 × 10 3
Tungsten 4 . 5 × 10 3 4 . 5 × 10 3
Iron 5 . 0 × 10 3 5 . 0 × 10 3
Platinum 3 . 93 × 10 3 3 . 93 × 10 3
Lead 3 . 9 × 10 3 3 . 9 × 10 3
Manganin (Cu, Mn, Ni alloy) 0 . 000 × 10 3 0 . 000 × 10 3
Constantan (Cu, Ni alloy) 0 . 002 × 10 3 0 . 002 × 10 3
Mercury 0 . 89 × 10 3 0 . 89 × 10 3
Nichrome (Ni, Fe, Cr alloy) 0 . 4 × 10 3 0 . 4 × 10 3
Semiconductors
Carbon (pure) 0 . 5 × 10 3 0 . 5 × 10 3
Germanium (pure) 50 × 10 3 50 × 10 3
Silicon (pure) 70 × 10 3 70 × 10 3
Table 20.2 Tempature Coefficients of Resistivity α α

Note also that αα is negative for the semiconductors listed in Table 20.2, meaning that their resistivity decreases with increasing temperature. They become better conductors at higher temperature, because increased thermal agitation increases the number of free charges available to carry current. This property of decreasing ρρ with temperature is also related to the type and amount of impurities present in the semiconductors.

The resistance of an object also depends on temperature, since R0R0 is directly proportional to ρρ. For a cylinder we know R=ρL/AR=ρL/A, and so, if LL and AA do not change greatly with temperature, RR will have the same temperature dependence as ρρ. (Examination of the coefficients of linear expansion shows them to be about two orders of magnitude less than typical temperature coefficients of resistivity, and so the effect of temperature on LL and AA is about two orders of magnitude less than on ρρ.) Thus,

R = R 0 ( 1 + αΔT ) R = R 0 ( 1 + αΔT )
20.24

is the temperature dependence of the resistance of an object, where R0R0 is the original resistance and RR is the resistance after a temperature change ΔTΔT. Numerous thermometers are based on the effect of temperature on resistance. (See Figure 20.12.) One of the most common is the thermistor, a semiconductor crystal with a strong temperature dependence, the resistance of which is measured to obtain its temperature. The device is small, so that it quickly comes into thermal equilibrium with the part of a person it touches.

A photograph showing two digital thermometers used for measuring body temperature.
Figure 20.12 These familiar thermometers are based on the automated measurement of a thermistor’s temperature-dependent resistance. (credit: Biol, Wikimedia Commons)

Example 20.6

Calculating Resistance: Hot-Filament Resistance

Although caution must be used in applying ρ=ρ0(1 +αΔT)ρ=ρ0(1 +αΔT) and R=R0(1 +αΔT)R=R0(1 +αΔT) for temperature changes greater than 100ºC100ºC, for tungsten the equations work reasonably well for very large temperature changes. What, then, is the resistance of the tungsten filament in the previous example if its temperature is increased from room temperature ( 20ºC 20ºC) to a typical operating temperature of 2850ºC2850ºC?

Strategy

This is a straightforward application of R=R0(1 +αΔT)R=R0(1 +αΔT), since the original resistance of the filament was given to be R0=0.350 ΩR0=0.350 Ω, and the temperature change is ΔT=2830ºCΔT=2830ºC.

Solution

The hot resistance RR is obtained by entering known values into the above equation:

R = R 0 ( 1 + αΔT ) = ( 0 . 350 Ω ) [ 1 + ( 4.5 × 10 –3 / ºC ) ( 2830º C ) ] = 4.8 Ω. R = R 0 ( 1 + αΔT ) = ( 0 . 350 Ω ) [ 1 + ( 4.5 × 10 –3 / ºC ) ( 2830º C ) ] = 4.8 Ω.
20.25

Discussion

This value is consistent with the headlight resistance example in Ohm’s Law: Resistance and Simple Circuits.

PhET Explorations

Resistance in a Wire

Learn about the physics of resistance in a wire. Change its resistivity, length, and area to see how they affect the wire's resistance. The sizes of the symbols in the equation change along with the diagram of a wire.

Footnotes

  • 1Values depend strongly on amounts and types of impurities
  • 2Values at 20°C.
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