Practical Applications of Heating Effect of Electric Current

 The generation of heat in a conductor is an inevitable consequence of electric current.

 However, heating effect of electric current has many useful applications.

 The electric laundry iron, electric toaster, electric oven, electric kettle and electric heater are some of the familiar devices based on Joule’s heating.

 The electric heating is also used to produce light, as in an electric bulb.

 Here, the filament must retain as much of the heat generated as is possible, so that it gets very hot and emits light. It must not melt at such high temperature.

 A strong metal with high melting point such as tungsten is used for making bulb filaments.

 The filament should be thermally isolated as much as possible, using insulating support, etc.

 The bulbs are usually filled with chemically inactive nitrogen and argon gases to prolong the life of filament.

 Most of the power consumed by the filament appears as heat, but a small part of it is in the form of light radiated.

 Another common application of Joule’s heating is the fuse used in electric circuits.

Also read :SOUND

 It protects circuits and appliances by stopping the flow of any unduly high electric current.

 The fuse is placed in series with the device. It consists of a piece of wire made of a metal or an alloy of appropriate melting point, for example aluminium, copper, iron, lead etc.

 If a current larger than the specified value flows through the circuit, the temperature of the fuse wire increases. This melts the fuse wire and breaks the circuit..