Length and Area of Cylindrical Nichrome Resistor

AI Thread Summary
To create a cylindrical nichrome resistor that draws 0.450 A from a 10.0 V battery with an internal resistance of 15.0 Ω, the required resistance of the resistor is calculated to be 7.22 Ω. The conductivity of nichrome is given as 6.7 × 10^5 A/(V⋅m), which is essential for determining the dimensions of the resistor. The volume of nichrome available is 20.0 mm^3, which must be utilized entirely to find the cylinder's length and cross-sectional area. By using the volume equation and rearranging it in terms of radius, both the length and area can be solved. The discussion emphasizes the importance of incorporating the volume constraint to find the necessary dimensions for the resistor.
Robotic-Cow
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Homework Statement


You must complete the circuit of (Figure 1) in such a way that it draws a current of 0.450 A from the battery. The battery maintains a potential difference of 10.0 V with no load, but has an internal resistance of Rbatt = 15.0 Ω . The only material you have is 20.0 mm^3 of nichrome, and you must use all of it. your plan is to form the nichrome into a cylindrical resistor. [The conductivity of nichrome is 6.7 × 105 A/(V⋅m).]
upload_2017-3-15_11-9-48.png

Part A
What must the cylinder length be?

Part B
What must the cylinder cross-sectional area be?

Homework Equations


I = V/R
R = L/(A*σ)
A = πr^2

The Attempt at a Solution


First, I solved for the resistance the created resistor must have. Since the two resistors would be in series, I solved the equivalent resistance to be R = Rn + Rb. (Rn = Resistance of new resistor that is being solved for, Rb = resistance of battery). To draw the correct amount of current out of the battery, I = V/(Rn+Rb). Solving for Rn, I got Rn = V/I-Rb = 10/0.45 - 15 = 7.22 Ω.

I'm pretty sure I need to use this equation: R = L/(A*σ) to solve for L and A, but since I only know R and σ, I still have two unknown variables to solve for, and only one equation. I'm guessing I need to incorporate the given detail that there is only 20 mm^3 of nichrome wire available, but I am not sure how to do that. Is there another equation I should use to do so, like volume or surface area?
 
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Is there a way to get volume out of L and A?

Edit: P.S. Welcome to Physics Forums.
 
Hi Robotic-Cow,

Welcome to Physics Forums!

Robotic-Cow said:
First, I solved for the resistance the created resistor must have. Since the two resistors would be in series, I solved the equivalent resistance to be R = Rn + Rb. (Rn = Resistance of new resistor that is being solved for, Rb = resistance of battery). To draw the correct amount of current out of the battery, I = V/(Rn+Rb). Solving for Rn, I got Rn = V/I-Rb = 10/0.45 - 15 = 7.22 Ω.
Looks good so far.
I'm pretty sure I need to use this equation: R = L/(A*σ) to solve for L and A, but since I only know R and σ, I still have two unknown variables to solve for, and only one equation. I'm guessing I need to incorporate the given detail that there is only 20 mm^3 of nichrome wire available, but I am not sure how to do that. Is there another equation I should use to do so, like volume or surface area?
Yup, you're given a volume value so an equation for the volume of the resistor you're creating seems appropriate.
 
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Thanks so much for the help :smile:! I managed to solve both length and cross-sectional area by rearranging the volume equation in terms of radius, and plugging it back into the equation for resistance to solve for length.
 
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