Chapter 20 Electric Current, Resistance, and Ohm’s Law
20.4 Electric Power and Energy
Summary
- Calculate the power dissipated by a resistor and power supplied by a power supply.
- Calculate the cost of electricity under various circumstances.
Power in Electric Circuits
Power is associated by many people with electricity. Knowing that power is the rate of energy use or energy conversion, what is the expression for electric power? Power transmission lines might come to mind. We also think of lightbulbs in terms of their power ratings in watts. Let us compare a 25-W bulb with a 60-W bulb. (See Figure 1(a).) Since both operate on the same voltage, the 60-W bulb must draw more current to have a greater power rating. Thus the 60-W bulb’s resistance must be lower than that of a 25-W bulb. If we increase voltage, we also increase power. For example, when a 25-W bulb that is designed to operate on 120 V is connected to 240 V, it briefly glows very brightly and then burns out. Precisely how are voltage, current, and resistance related to electric power?

Electric energy depends on both the voltage involved and the charge moved. This is expressed most simply as
Recognizing that current is
Electric power (
To see the relationship of power to resistance, we combine Ohm’s law with
Note that the first equation is always valid, whereas the other two can be used only for resistors. In a simple circuit, with one voltage source and a single resistor, the power supplied by the voltage source and that dissipated by the resistor are identical. (In more complicated circuits,
Different insights can be gained from the three different expressions for electric power. For example,
Example 1: Calculating Power Dissipation and Current: Hot and Cold Power
(a) Consider the examples given in Chapter 20.2 Ohm’s Law: Resistance and Simple Circuits and Chapter 20.3 Resistance and Resistivity. Then find the power dissipated by the car headlight in these examples, both when it is hot and when it is cold. (b) What current does it draw when cold?
Strategy for (a)
For the hot headlight, we know voltage and current, so we can use
Solution for (a)
Entering the known values of current and voltage for the hot headlight, we obtain
The cold resistance was
Discussion for (a)
The 30 W dissipated by the hot headlight is typical. But the 411 W when cold is surprisingly higher. The initial power quickly decreases as the bulb’s temperature increases and its resistance increases.
Strategy and Solution for (b)
The current when the bulb is cold can be found several different ways. We rearrange one of the power equations,
Discussion for (b)
The cold current is remarkably higher than the steady-state value of 2.50 A, but the current will quickly decline to that value as the bulb’s temperature increases. Most fuses and circuit breakers (used to limit the current in a circuit) are designed to tolerate very high currents briefly as a device comes on. In some cases, such as with electric motors, the current remains high for several seconds, necessitating special “slow blow” fuses.
The Cost of Electricity
The more electric appliances you use and the longer they are left on, the higher your electric bill. This familiar fact is based on the relationship between energy and power. You pay for the energy used. Since
is the energy used by a device using power
The electrical energy (
Making Connections: Energy, Power, and Time
The relationship
Example 2: Calculating the Cost Effectiveness of Compact Fluorescent Lights (CFL)
If the cost of electricity in your area is 12 cents per kWh, what is the total cost (capital plus operation) of using a 60-W incandescent bulb for 1000 hours (the lifetime of that bulb) if the bulb cost 25 cents? (b) If we replace this bulb with a compact fluorescent light that provides the same light output, but at one-quarter the wattage, and which costs $1.50 but lasts 10 times longer (10,000 hours), what will that total cost be?
Strategy
To find the operating cost, we first find the energy used in kilowatt-hours and then multiply by the cost per kilowatt-hour.
Solution for (a)
The energy used in kilowatt-hours is found by entering the power and time into the expression for energy:
In kilowatt-hours, this is
Now the electricity cost is
The total cost will be $7.20 for 1000 hours (about one-half year at 5 hours per day).
Solution for (b)
Since the CFL uses only 15 W and not 60 W, the electricity cost will be $7.20/4 = $1.80. The CFL will last 10 times longer than the incandescent, so that the investment cost will be 1/10 of the bulb cost for that time period of use, or 0.1($1.50) = $0.15. Therefore, the total cost will be $1.95 for 1000 hours.
Discussion
Therefore, it is much cheaper to use the CFLs, even though the initial investment is higher. The increased cost of labor that a business must include for replacing the incandescent bulbs more often has not been figured in here.
Making Connections: Take-Home Experiment—Electrical Energy Use Inventory
1) Make a list of the power ratings on a range of appliances in your home or room. Explain why something like a toaster has a higher rating than a digital clock. Estimate the energy consumed by these appliances in an average day (by estimating their time of use). Some appliances might only state the operating current. If the household voltage is 120 V, then use
Section Summary
- Electric power
is the rate (in watts) that energy is supplied by a source or dissipated by a device. - Three expressions for electrical power are
,and
- The energy used by a device with a power
over a time is .
Conceptual Questions
1: Why do incandescent lightbulbs grow dim late in their lives, particularly just before their filaments break?
2: The power dissipated in a resistor is given by
Probles & Exercises
1: What is the power of a
2: What power is supplied to the starter motor of a large truck that draws 250 A of current from a 24.0-V battery hookup?
3: A charge of 4.00 C of charge passes through a pocket calculator’s solar cells in 4.00 h. What is the power output, given the calculator’s voltage output is 3.00 V? (See Figure 2.)

4: How many watts does a flashlight that has
5: Find the power dissipated in each of these extension cords: (a) an extension cord having a
6: Verify that the units of a volt-ampere are watts, as implied by the equation
7: Show that the units
8: Show that the units
9: Verify the energy unit equivalence that
10: Electrons in an X-ray tube are accelerated through
11: An electric water heater consumes 5.00 kW for 2.00 h per day. What is the cost of running it for one year if electricity costs

12: With a 1200-W toaster, how much electrical energy is needed to make a slice of toast (cooking time = 1 minute)? At
13: What would be the maximum cost of a CFL such that the total cost (investment plus operating) would be the same for both CFL and incandescent 60-W bulbs? Assume the cost of the incandescent bulb is 25 cents and that electricity costs
14: Some makes of older cars have 6.00-V electrical systems. (a) What is the hot resistance of a 30.0-W headlight in such a car? (b) What current flows through it?
15: Alkaline batteries have the advantage of putting out constant voltage until very nearly the end of their life. How long will an alkaline battery rated at
16: A cauterizer, used to stop bleeding in surgery, puts out 2.00 mA at 15.0 kV. (a) What is its power output? (b) What is the resistance of the path?
17: The average television is said to be on 6 hours per day. Estimate the yearly cost of electricity to operate 100 million TVs, assuming their power consumption averages 150 W and the cost of electricity averages
18: An old lightbulb draws only 50.0 W, rather than its original 60.0 W, due to evaporative thinning of its filament. By what factor is its diameter reduced, assuming uniform thinning along its length? Neglect any effects caused by temperature differences.
19: 00-gauge copper wire has a diameter of 9.266 mm. Calculate the power loss in a kilometer of such wire when it carries
20: Integrated Concepts
Cold vaporizers pass a current through water, evaporating it with only a small increase in temperature. One such home device is rated at 3.50 A and utilizes 120 V AC with 95.0% efficiency. (a) What is the vaporization rate in grams per minute? (b) How much water must you put into the vaporizer for 8.00 h of overnight operation? (See Figure 4.)

21: Integrated Concepts
(a) What energy is dissipated by a lightning bolt having a 20,000-A current, a voltage of
22: Integrated Concepts
What current must be produced by a 12.0-V battery-operated bottle warmer in order to heat 75.0 g of glass, 250 g of baby formula, and
23: Integrated Concepts
How much time is needed for a surgical cauterizer to raise the temperature of 1.00 g of tissue from 37.0ºC to 100ºC and then boil away 0.500 g of water, if it puts out 2.00 mA at 15.0 kV? Ignore heat transfer to the surroundings.
24: Integrated Concepts
24: Hydroelectric generators (see Figure 5) at Hoover Dam produce a maximum current of

25: Integrated Concepts
(a) Assuming 95.0% efficiency for the conversion of electrical power by the motor, what current must the 12.0-V batteries of a 750-kg electric car be able to supply: (a) To accelerate from rest to 25.0 m/s in 1.00 min? (b) To climb a

26: Integrated Concepts
A light-rail commuter train draws 630 A of 650-V DC electricity when accelerating. (a) What is its power consumption rate in kilowatts? (b) How long does it take to reach 20.0 m/s starting from rest if its loaded mass is
27: Integrated Concepts
(a) An aluminum power transmission line has a resistance of
28: Integrated Concepts
(a) An immersion heater utilizing 120 V can raise the temperature of a
29: Integrated Concepts
(a) What is the cost of heating a hot tub containing 1500 kg of water from 10.0ºC to 40.0ºC, assuming 75.0% efficiency to account for heat transfer to the surroundings? The cost of electricity is
30: Unreasonable Results
(a) What current is needed to transmit
31: Unreasonable Results
(a) What current is needed to transmit
32: Construct Your Own Problem
Consider an electric immersion heater used to heat a cup of water to make tea. Construct a problem in which you calculate the needed resistance of the heater so that it increases the temperature of the water and cup in a reasonable amount of time. Also calculate the cost of the electrical energy used in your process. Among the things to be considered are the voltage used, the masses and heat capacities involved, heat losses, and the time over which the heating takes place. Your instructor may wish for you to consider a thermal safety switch (perhaps bimetallic) that will halt the process before damaging temperatures are reached in the immersion unit.
Glossary
- electric power
- the rate at which electrical energy is supplied by a source or dissipated by a device; it is the product of current times voltage
Solutions
Problems & Exercise
1:
5: (a) 1.50 W
(b) 7.50 W
7:
9:
11: $438/y
13: $6.25
15: 1.58 h
17: $3.94 billion/year
19: 25.5 W
21: (a)
(b) 769 kg
23: 45.0 s
25: (a) 343 A
(b)
(c)
27: (a)
(b)
3o: (a)
(b)
(c) The transmission lines dissipate more power than they are supposed to transmit.
(d) A voltage of 480 V is unreasonably low for a transmission voltage. Long-distance transmission lines are kept at much higher voltages (often hundreds of kilovolts) to reduce power losses.