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Voltage, Current, Resistance, Power

Systems Engineering
StudyPulse

Voltage, Current, Resistance, Power

Systems Engineering
01 May 2026

Voltage, Current, Resistance, and Power in Electrical Circuits

Overview

Four electrical quantities underpin all circuit analysis and design: voltage, current, resistance, and power. Mastering their definitions, units, interrelationships, and calculation methods is fundamental to VCE Systems Engineering.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Voltage drives current through resistance; power is the rate at which energy is converted. All four quantities are linked through Ohm’s Law and the power equations.

Voltage ($V$)

Voltage (potential difference) is the electrical energy transferred per unit charge between two points:

$$V = \frac{W}{Q}$$

Symbol Quantity Unit
$V$ Voltage Volt (V)
$W$ Energy Joule (J)
$Q$ Charge Coulomb (C)
  • A battery or power supply maintains a potential difference that drives current through a circuit.
  • Voltage is always measured between two points.
  • In a series circuit, voltages across components add to equal the supply.
  • In a parallel circuit, all branches share the same voltage.

EXAM TIP: Voltage is measured with a voltmeter connected in parallel. Current is measured with an ammeter connected in series. Swapping these connections is a common error.

Current ($I$)

Current is the rate of flow of electric charge:

$$I = \frac{Q}{t}$$

Symbol Quantity Unit
$I$ Current Ampere (A)
$Q$ Charge Coulomb (C)
$t$ Time second (s)
  • In a series circuit, current is the same at every point.
  • In a parallel circuit, current splits between branches proportionally.

Worked example: A 9 V battery drives 180 mA through a resistor. How much charge passes in 10 s?
$$Q = I \times t = 0.18 \times 10 = 1.8 \text{ C}$$

Resistance ($R$)

Resistance is the opposition to current flow, arising from collisions between charge carriers and conductor atoms:

$$R = \frac{V}{I}$$

Symbol Quantity Unit
$R$ Resistance Ohm ($\Omega$)

Factors affecting resistance:
- Material (copper low, nichrome high)
- Length: longer wire → higher resistance
- Cross-sectional area: thicker wire → lower resistance
- Temperature: most conductors increase resistance with temperature

REMEMBER: Ohm’s Law ($V = IR$) holds for ohmic conductors at constant temperature. Non-ohmic devices (diodes, thermistors) do not follow a linear $V$–$I$ relationship.

Power ($P$)

Power is the rate at which electrical energy is converted to other forms:

$$P = VI = I^2 R = \frac{V^2}{R}$$

Form Use when
$P = VI$ Both $V$ and $I$ are known
$P = I^2 R$ $I$ and $R$ are known
$P = V^2 / R$ $V$ and $R$ are known

Worked example 1: A 12 V lamp draws 2 A.
$$P = VI = 12 \times 2 = 24 \text{ W}$$
$$R = \frac{V}{I} = \frac{12}{2} = 6 \text{ } \Omega$$

Worked example 2: A 100 $\Omega$ resistor has 5 V across it.
$$I = \frac{V}{R} = \frac{5}{100} = 0.05 \text{ A} = 50 \text{ mA}$$
$$P = I^2 R = (0.05)^2 \times 100 = 0.25 \text{ W}$$

VCAA FOCUS: Power calculations in circuits are examined frequently. Know all three power formula forms and select the most efficient one for the given information.

Energy Consumed

$$W = Pt = VIt$$

Worked example: A 500 W element runs for 3 minutes.
$$W = 500 \times 180 = 90{,}000 \text{ J} = 90 \text{ kJ}$$

Complete Circuit Problem

A 24 V supply connected to R1 = 40 $\Omega$ in series with R2 = 80 $\Omega$:

$$R_T = 40 + 80 = 120 \text{ } \Omega$$
$$I = \frac{24}{120} = 0.2 \text{ A}$$
$$V_1 = 0.2 \times 40 = 8 \text{ V}, \quad V_2 = 0.2 \times 80 = 16 \text{ V}$$
$$P_1 = (0.2)^2 \times 40 = 1.6 \text{ W}, \quad P_2 = (0.2)^2 \times 80 = 3.2 \text{ W}$$
$$P_T = 24 \times 0.2 = 4.8 \text{ W} = P_1 + P_2 \checkmark$$

COMMON MISTAKE: When using $P = V^2/R$ in a series circuit, use the voltage across that component, not the supply voltage. Using the supply voltage gives the wrong answer for individual components.

Summary

Quantity Symbol Unit Key equation
Voltage $V$ Volt (V) $V = IR$
Current $I$ Ampere (A) $I = V/R$
Resistance $R$ Ohm ($\Omega$) $R = V/I$
Power $P$ Watt (W) $P = VI = I^2R = V^2/R$
Energy $W$ Joule (J) $W = Pt$

APPLICATION: Selecting a current-limiting resistor for an LED requires $R = (V_{supply} - V_{LED}) / I_{LED}$, then checking $P = I^2 R$ is within the resistor’s power rating — applying all four quantities in one real design step.

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