Short circuits and earth wires
I can explain how electric circuits are wired in a home, with circuit breakers, fuses and earth wires for safety.
Short circuits and earth wires
I can explain how electric circuits are wired in a home, with circuit breakers, fuses and earth wires for safety.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- A short circuit happens when a wire becomes loose and touches the wrong part of a circuit, or makes a new circuit.
- If a live wire touches the inside of a metal case, the metal case may become live.
- If there is too much current in an appliance, a fuse on the live wire in its plug melts and turns it off.
- From a live metal case, current flows along an earth and live wire, melts a fuse and turns the electricity off.
- Domestic circuits with excessive current are turned off by circuit breakers in a consumer box to prevent fire.
Common misconception
A short circuit is a circuit that doesn’t work.
Demonstrate several short circuits and provide opportunity for pupils to describe what they are in their own words.
Keywords
Short circuit - a complete circuit with a very small resistance, often caused by a loose wire
Double insulation - two layers of electrical insulation, including the outer casing of an appliance
Fuse - a thin wire that melts when a dangerously large current flows through it
Earth wire - a wire connected between a metal casing and the ground (0 V)
Circuit breaker - a switch that is turned off by an electromagnet when a dangerously large current flows through it
Equipment
power pack, heat resistant mat, leads and crocodile clips, thin resistance wire, lamp, and tin can
Licence
This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2024), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).
Video
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