Electric field and current in a conductor

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In a conductor carrying current, an electric field is indeed present, contrary to the assumption that potential is uniform throughout. While the potential is the same across a conductor in electrostatic equilibrium, this is not the case when current flows, as seen in DC circuits. The electric field required to drive the current is very small due to the conductor's low resistance, resulting in negligible voltage drop across it. Superconductors, which have zero resistance, still require a potential difference elsewhere in the circuit to maintain current flow, as they are connected to elements with resistance. Understanding these concepts requires moving beyond basic circuit theory to more complex models like the London equations for superconductors.
FrankJ777
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[My understanding is that in a conductor which is conducting a current there is and electric field present also. If the electric field can be found by E= - \frac{dV}{dl}, what is E in a conductor. On a conductor in a DC circuit the potential is the same everwhere on that conductor, so I believe - \frac{dV}{dl} would be 0? So is the equation E= - \frac{dV}{dl} only valid for noncunductors?

I'm only in my second month of Phys II so I'm still pretty new to this concept. If anybody can clear this up I'd really appreciate it.
 
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FrankJ777 said:
On a conductor in a DC circuit the potential is the same everwhere on that conductor, so ...
No. The potential is the same throughout a conductor in electrostatic equilibrium, not when there's a current through it as in a DC circuit.
 
Doc Al said:
No. The potential is the same throughout a conductor in electrostatic equilibrium, not when there's a current through it as in a DC circuit.

Ok, so I guess that's where I'm getting confused.
If you look at the .jpg example circuit I've attached I can explain my question (its done with MS paint so its not great):

Anyway, you can see it represents a DC circuit with voltage(potential) readings taken at several points. At points A,B, and C along the conductor there is no difference in voltage. So does E= -\frac{dV}{dl} =0.
I guess it doesn't, but then my question is how is there a change in voltage(potential) along the conductor, but my voltage readings show no difference.

I know I'm missing something in my idea of potential, electric fields, current, etc but I'm not sure what it is.
Thanks to anyone who can help enlighten me. :smile:
 

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Ah, my bad. Now I see your point. Since the conductors have almost no resistance, they require only a very small electric field to drive the current through them. Compared to the resistors, they have zero voltage drop across them.

Sorry for the confusion.
 
Yes, there should be no potential difference between points A and C. In circuit theory, a conductor is always "super" with no resistance, so current can flow through it without a potential difference. There is a potential difference only when current flows across a "circuit element" like a resistor, capacitor or inductor.

This is just a simplification to make life easier. In reality, copper wires are not "super" conductors with no resistance, they just have a very small resistance. Even in some cases where the wire has significant resistance distributed along its entire length, it may be a good approximation to model it as a combination of a "super" conductor and a resistor in series.

Edit: I see Doc Al already posted an answer that is the same as mine, but shorter and sweeter.
 
Thanks guys, that helps clear things up quite a bit.

If you don't mind me beating a dead horse though, how does current flow thorugh a perfect conductor, like a superconductor with zero resistance? With zero resistance, there is no difference in potential and therefor no E field, correct? So what causes the current to flow?

I'm still really new to this conceptual physics so I'm trying to sqare it away with what I already know, or what think I know about electronics. I'm not even halfway through the semester and I've already had to discard many of the assumtions I've made based on several years as an electronics tech. I'm glad there's a place like this to get answers.
 
FrankJ777 said:
Thanks guys, that helps clear things up quite a bit.

If you don't mind me beating a dead horse though, how does current flow thorugh a perfect conductor, like a superconductor with zero resistance? With zero resistance, there is no difference in potential and therefor no E field, correct? So what causes the current to flow?

Even with superconductors there is a potential difference somewhere in the circuit, remember that the superconductor is connected to "something" and that something has a resistance and all the voltage drop is across that resistance.
I.e. while you can't really voltage bias a superconducting circuit there is nothing preventing you from using current bias.

If you wan't to understand what goes on in the superconductor itself you can't use the usual equations, they are simply not valid. However, you can modify the usual equations slightly and use what is known as London theory (the London equations) to quite accurately predict what happens in superconducting circuits at the macroscopic level.
 
FrankJ777 said:
If you don't mind me beating a dead horse though, how does current flow thorugh a perfect conductor, like a superconductor with zero resistance? With zero resistance, there is no difference in potential and therefor no E field, correct? So what causes the current to flow?

Just to make sure, the "super" conductor I talked about only exists in circuit theory as an excellent approximation for a real conductor like copper wire which has small, not zero resistance. f95toli is talking about superconductors which exist in real life, really have zero resistance, and which are not made of copper wire.
 
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