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Electric current by definition is the flow of electrons. That is what electricity is. Electricity -- like water flowing through a pipe -- can be stopped by preventing its flow. The flow of electrons can be stopped by doing what is termed "breaking the circuit". That means by terminating the wire or conductor material so that the electricity cannot move along that path. The sparks you see in the cases of static electricity and lightening result from their circuits having been opened -- broken and therefore terminated. In these two cases the voltage (pressure) was great enough to make the current jump the gap. In the first case, the gap may be between your finger and another person; in the second case, the gap is between a cloud mass and the earth. OR Turning Electricity On and Off You've scrounged around your growing electronics bin and come up with wires to connect a circuit together and batteries to power the circuit. So how do you turn the power on and off? You use switches and relays. Turning current on and off with switches When you move the switch to shut off your flashlight, you disconnect the wires that run from the battery to the light bulb. All switches do the same thing: Connect wires to allow electric current to flow or disconnect wires to stop electric current from flowing. When you turn off your flashlight, you put the switch in what is called the open position. With the switch in the open position, you have a disconnected wire, and no current can flow. When you turn on the flashlight, you put the switch in the closed position. With the switch in the closed position, you've connected the wire (and completed the circuit), and current can flow. Starting with simple switches Your flashlight usually comes with something called a slide switch. With a slide switch, you slide the switch forward or backward to turn the light on or off. But toggle, rocker, and slide switches all do the same job, so grab whatever switch you have handy that you can easily use on the project that you're building. For example, a slide switch works well on a round, handheld flashlight because of the position of your thumb, but a toggle switch may work best to flip on a gadget sitting on your workbench. Push-button switches come in three versions: Normally closed (NC): This push-button switch disconnects the wire only when you push the button. Normally open (NO): This push-button switch connects the wire only when you push the button. Push on/Push off buttons: This switch connects the wire with one push and disconnects the wire with the next. You typically find push-button switches in electronics to start or stop a circuit. For example, you press a normally open push-button switch to ring a doorbell. What's inside a switch? You call the basic switches that we talk about in the previous section single-pole single-throw, or SPST types. Don't worry about all the different names: In essence, these switch types have one wire coming into the switch and one wire leaving it. Just to keep your electronics life interesting, you may come across other types of switches that are wired a bit differently, called double pole. Where single pole switches have one input wire, double pole switches have two input wires. With single throw switches you can connect or disconnect each input wire to one output wire, while double throw switches allow you to choose which of two output wires you connect each input wire to. There are a few single- and double-pole variations, including Single-pole double-throw (SPDT): In this switch, one wire comes into the switch and two wires leave the switch. When you want to choose what device a circuit turns on (for example, a green light to let people know that they can enter a room or a red light to tell them to stay out), use an SPDT switch. Double-pole single-throw (DPST): This switch has two wires coming into it and two wires leaving. You can use a DPST switch to control two separate circuits. For example, you can have one circuit with components running on 5 volts and another circuit with components running on 12 volts. With one switch, you can turn both circuits on or off. Double-pole double-throw (DPDT): This switch has two wires coming into it and four wires leaving. A DPDT switch has three positions. In the first position, the first pair of output wires connect. In the second position, all four output wires disconnect (some DPDT switches do not have this position). In the third position, the second pair of output wires connect. You can use this type of switch to reverse the polarity of DC voltage going into a motor so that the motor turns in the opposite direction. (One position makes the motor turn clockwise, one position turns off power to the motor, and one position turns the motor counterclockwise.) Let a relay flip the switch You've made a gadget to let you know when your no-good brother-in-law, Herman, is raiding the refrigerator. But there's one problem: The gadget runs on a 5-volt battery pack, and you want the gadget to turn on enough sound and light to scare the guy into the next county. No problem, just use a relay. How relays work A relay is simply an electrically powered switch. When your gadget sends 5 volts to the relay, an electromagnet turns on and then closes a switch inside the relay. If you wire that switch to 117 volts, you can power enough lights and sirens to send Herman scurrying. Exploring electromagnets So how does the electromagnet part of a relay setup work? An electromagnet can be something as simple as coiled wire around an iron bar or even a nail. When you run some current through the wire, the nail becomes magnetized. When you shut off the current, the nail loses that magnetic quality. Two magnets attract or repel each other, depending on which ends (or poles) of the magnets you put together. Part of the switch contained in a relay consists of a lever attached to a magnet. When voltage runs through the wire coil, the electromagnet pulls the lever toward it, and the switch closes, connecting the 115 volts to the lights and sirens (goodbye, Herman!). When you shut off current to the wire coil the electromagnet shuts off and a spring pulls the lever away, opening the switch. You can find relays that use 5, 12, or 24 VDC to power an electromagnet with a SPST, SPDT, or DPDT switch. Here are a few relay lingo options. Often instead of saying that a switch in the relay opens or closes, people talk about contacts opening or closing. Also, people sometimes call a lever in a relay an armature. But a relay by any other name, would work the same...

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Answer #2:

(Mine will be brief, as I have other things to do.)

Two ways to do that: Open/close the circuit, as exhaustively described above.

Equalize the electrical potential at the two ends of the circuit.

No potential difference (voltage) = No current.

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Answer #3

Open the circuit's switch, the current flow stops. Close the circuit's switch the current flow starts.

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10y ago
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Wiki User

11y ago

The device used for this purpose is called a disconnect switch. By opening and closing the electrical switch, it stops and starts the current flowing in an electrical circuit.

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Q: How can you start and stop the flow of electrical current?
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Related questions

What is a material that cuts down the flow of current but does not stop?

That is an electrical resistor.


How do you start and stop the flow of electric current?

with a switch.


Why do the electrical gadgets stop working when switch is turned off?

A switch breaks the flow of electrons (current).


What are switches used for in a circuit?

A switch is a means of making (on) or breaking (off) an electrical circuit.


What device used to stop and start the flow of electricity in a circuit is a?

A switch is a device that stops and starts current flow in a circuit.


What do you use fuses in?

Electrical circuits, to limit the maximum current flow. Fuses will "blow", or burn out, and cause an open circuit, to stop the flow of current when it could potentially damage a circuit, system, or device.


What causes electrical current to fail?

If you open part of the circuit (for example, with a switch), the current will stop flowing. Also, if there is no voltage driving the current (for example, if a battery runs empty), no current will flow.


When a switch in an electrical circuit is turned off what will happen?

Closing a switch in an electrical circuit will complete the circuit. The supply voltage will then be applied to that circuit, and current will flow through that circuit.


Which electrical protective device is designed to detect a difference in a current between circuit wires and interrupt the circuit and stop the flow of electricity?

A resistor is a device designed to detect difference in current and stop the flow of electricity. On most every type of electric engine or circuit has a resistor.


Why does a switch make a light turn on and off?

The purpose of a switch is to stop and start a current flow in a circuit. The stopping of a current flow in a circuit effects the load of the circuit by stopping its action. Resuming the current flow in a circuit also resumes the action of the load.


When would an electromagnet stop working?

An electromagnet would stop working if the electrical current flow is interrupted or if the power supply is disconnected. Additionally, if the coil overheats, it can damage the insulation and cause the electromagnet to fail.


How do fuses and circuit breakers protect you home against electrical fires?

It must understand that, short circuit is the case when the electricity find a lower resistance path to travel through. It will result to large amount of electricity flow and with high current flow then it emitted heat and would be so hot that it start the fire. Preventing short circuit damage, it install the fuse or circuit breaker as the bottle neck. When too much of the current flow through then the circuit breaker stop the flow of current and prevent fire.