Principle
Based on the experimentally determined relationships R ∼ I for constant ρ and A and R ∼ 1âA for constant ρ and l, the specific resistance was introduced as a material "constant" via R ∼ lâA and the equation R = ρ ⋅ lâ A was worked out.
Using this equation, the students should experimentally determine the value ρ for common conductor materials.
Tasks
- Measure current and voltage pairs on pieces of copper, iron and constantan wire
- Calculate the electrical resistance of the wires from the measured values
- Determine the specific resistance using the length and cross-sectional area of the wires.
Learning objectives
Students learn experimentally how the resistance of a conductor depends on its length and cross-sectional area. They use the formula R = ρ ⋅ lâ A to determine the resistivity ρ of different materials.
Advantages
- No additional cable connections required between the components - clearer and faster assembly
- Contact reliability thanks to components that can be interlocked like a puzzle
- Hard gold-plated, corrosion-resistant contacts
- Double learning success: electrical circuit diagram visible on the top and real components on the bottom