Conduction materials include
metals,
electrolytes,
superconductors,
semiconductors,
plasmas and some nonmetallic conductors such as
graphite and
conductive polymers.
Copper has a high
conductivity.
Annealed copper is the international standard to which all other electrical conductors are compared; the
International Annealed Copper Standard conductivity is , although ultra-pure copper can slightly exceed 101% IACS. The main grade of copper used for electrical applications, such as building wire,
motor windings, cables and
busbars, is
electrolytic-tough pitch (ETP) copper (CW004A or
ASTM designation C100140). If high conductivity copper must be
welded or
brazed or used in a reducing atmosphere, then
oxygen-free high conductivity copper (CW008A or ASTM designation C10100) may be used. Because of its ease of connection by
soldering or clamping, copper is still the most common choice for most light-gauge wires.
Silver is 6% more conductive than copper, but due to cost it is not practical in most cases. However, it is used in specialized equipment, such as
satellites, and as a thin plating to mitigate
skin effect losses at high frequencies. Famously, of silver on loan from the
United States Treasury were used in the making of the
calutron magnets during
World War II due to wartime shortages of copper.
Aluminum wire is the most common metal in
electric power transmission and
distribution. Although only 61% of the conductivity of copper by cross-sectional area, its lower density makes it twice as conductive by mass. As aluminum is roughly one-third the cost of copper by weight, the economic advantages are considerable when large conductors are required. The disadvantages of aluminum wiring lie in its mechanical and chemical properties. It readily forms an insulating oxide, making connections heat up. Its larger
coefficient of thermal expansion than the brass materials used for connectors causes connections to loosen. Aluminum can also "creep", slowly deforming under load, which also loosens connections. These effects can be mitigated with suitably designed connectors and extra care in installation, but they have made
aluminum building wiring unpopular past the
service drop. Very few
organic compounds conduct electricity. For example,
hydrocarbon oils, such as
octane, are a common
transformer insulator. Typical organic compounds do not conduct because they lack
charge carriers. They are uncharged molecules, unable to perform
ionic conduction; and their electrons are imperturbable at low energy, localized to relatively inert
covalent bonds. Rare organic conductors arise from a failure of either condition: certain
ionic liquids conduct through ion transport and conductive polymers delocalize a substantial portion of their electrons in a
π system. While pure
water is not an electrical conductor, even a small portion of ionic impurities, such as
salt, can rapidly transform it into a conductor. ==Wire size==