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A copper wire has diameter 0.5 mm and resistivity of 1.6 × 10–8 Ω m. What will be the length of this wire to make its resistance 10 Ω? How much does the resistance change if the diameter is doubled?

Current Electricity

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Answer

Given,

diameter = 0.5 mm

area = πd24=3.14×(5×104)24\dfrac{πd^2}{4} = \dfrac{3.14 \times (5 \times 10^{-4})^2}{4} = 19.625 x 10–8 m

resistivity = 1.6 × 10–8 Ω m

R = 10 Ω

l = ?

We know, R = ρ lA\dfrac{l}{A}

Substituting we get,

10 = 1.6 × 10–8 x l19.625×108\dfrac{l}{19.625 \times 10^{-8}}

l = 10×19.6251.6\dfrac{10 \times 19.625}{1.6 } = 122.7 m

The length of the wire is 122.72 m.

When the diameter is doubled

According to the formula,

R = ρ lA\dfrac{l}{A} where A = πd24\dfrac{πd^2}{4}

Hence, R ∝ 1d2\dfrac{1}{d^2}

When diameter is double,

Resistance will change by 1(2d)2\dfrac{1}{(2d)^2} = 14d2\dfrac{1}{4d^2}

∴ Resistance will become 14th\dfrac{1}{4}^{\text{th}} of its original value.

Hence, new resistance = 14×10\dfrac{1}{4} \times 10 = 2.5 Ω

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