Effects of Cell Arrangement on EMF in Series and Parallel Circuits

AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the effects of connecting cells in series versus parallel on electromotive force (emf). In series, the total emf is the sum of the individual cell emfs, while in parallel, the emf remains equal to the highest individual cell emf. The reasoning behind these differences lies in how the arrangement impacts electron flow and circuit behavior. Cells in series increase voltage but maintain the same current, while parallel connections provide the same voltage with increased capacity, allowing for better current distribution. Understanding the physical concept of voltage and its implications in these configurations is essential for grasping the underlying principles.
Cheman
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Cells in series and parallel...

How is emf effected by having cells in series and parallel? I would have thought that for both you would just add the emfs of each cell up, since in both ways you arrange them you are just increasing the attraction/ repulsion experianced by the elctrons in wire.

Thanks in advance. :smile:
 
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E_{series} = \sum_i E_i

E_{parallel} = max(E_i, ~i=1..n)
 
But is there a proof for this, either mathematically or in terms of visualised physics?

Surely, each of the cells is going to "push/ pull" the elctrons round ciruit with certain force - why will there arrangement make any difference?
 
My understanding of it, although probably very flawed :-p , is that if they are in series, think of the batteries working together, once some electrons are pushed along by one, the other pushes even more, and in parallel, there is an equal path for the electrons to go, so they separate and act as a cell with the same volage, but the 2 will have a higher capacity now, because each is drawing half the current, unless the voltages for the cells are different, then it will short. I still need to get a better idea of what voltage physically is myself :rolleyes: My EE instructor doesn't care for the science behind the engineering, so I can blame him for my lack of understanding :wink:
 
So I know that electrons are fundamental, there's no 'material' that makes them up, it's like talking about a colour itself rather than a car or a flower. Now protons and neutrons and quarks and whatever other stuff is there fundamentally, I want someone to kind of teach me these, I have a lot of questions that books might not give the answer in the way I understand. Thanks
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