Static charge and electric fields
Atoms and charge
An atom is electrically neutral — equal numbers of positive protons and negative electrons. Protons are fixed in the nucleus; electrons can move (conduct) or transfer between insulators (charge by friction).
Charging by friction
When two suitable insulators are rubbed together, electrons transfer from one to the other.
- The material that gains electrons becomes negatively charged.
- The material that loses electrons becomes positively charged.
- Equal and opposite charges — overall conservation of charge.
Classic example: a polythene rod rubbed with a duster. The polythene gains electrons → negative; the duster loses electrons → positive.
Forces between charges
- Like charges repel.
- Opposite charges attract.
- A charged object can also attract a small uncharged object by induction — the charges in the uncharged object rearrange (e.g. a charged comb attracts pieces of paper).
Electric fields
A charged object is surrounded by an electric field — the region in which another charge would feel a force. Field lines:
- Point from + to −.
- Are perpendicular to the surface of a charged sphere.
- Closer field lines = stronger field.
- A radial field exists around a point charge (or sphere); a uniform field exists between parallel plates.
Field strength decreases with distance — closer charges experience a larger force.
Hazards and uses
- Hazard: a person walking on a synthetic carpet builds up charge; touching a metal handle gives a small shock. In refuelling, a spark can ignite vapour — earthing is essential.
- Uses: photocopiers (charge attracts toner), electrostatic paint sprayers (paint droplets repel each other → even coverage; attracted to oppositely-charged car panel).
- Lightning conductors safely earth charge from clouds → reduces strike damage.
OCR exam tip
For a 4-mark question on a paint sprayer, structure your answer: (1) paint droplets all gain same charge, (2) repel each other → fine spray, (3) car body opposite charge, (4) attracts paint → even coat, less waste.
AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-ocr-combined-science-leaves