Charge Motion in Metals: Difference between revisions

From Physics Book
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 50: Line 50:




[Fields]
[[Category:Fields]]

Revision as of 20:21, 28 November 2015

Written by Will Rountree

Mobile Electron Sea

Metals, like all matter, are made of atoms. These atoms consist of a nucleus surrounded by electrons. The majority of metals have few electrons in the outer orbitals, meaning that valence electrons are not tightly bound to the nucleus and are able to move through the material. The electrons aren't shared or transferred between atoms; they are available to all nuclei in the metal. Often there is only free electron per atom, but that is all it takes to create a "sea" of electrons surrounding the atoms. Due to every atom lacking a negatively charged electron, the atoms are positively charged and remain bound together by the "sea."

Charge Motion

A Mathematical Model

A Computational Model

A Mathematical Model

Examples

Simple

Middling

Difficult

Connectedness

History

See also

Further reading

External links

References

http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/electric/conins.html#c1