Voltage, current, and charge In general,
electric potential is equivalent to
hydraulic head. This model assumes that the water is flowing horizontally, so that the force of gravity can be ignored. In this case, electric potential is equivalent to
pressure. The
voltage (or
voltage drop or
potential difference) is a difference in pressure between two points. Electric potential is usually measured in
volts.
Electric current is equivalent to a hydraulic
volume flow rate; that is, the volumetric quantity of flowing water over time. Usually measured in
amperes. A unit of
electric charge is analogous to a unit volume of water.
Basic circuit elements File:Electrionics Analogy - Pipe (Wire).svg|
Conducting wire: a simple hose File:Electrionics Analogy - Reduced Pipe (Resistor).svg|
Resistor: a constricted pipe File:1-1111 CU-solderfitting-type 5130-22.jpg|''Node in
Kirchhoff's junction rule:'' a
pipe tee filled with flowing water A relatively wide hose completely filled with water is equivalent to a
conducting wire. A rigidly mounted pipe is equivalent to a
trace on a circuit board. When comparing to a trace or wire, the hose or pipe should be thought of as having semi-permanent caps on the ends. Connecting one end of a wire to a circuit is equivalent to un-capping one end of the hose and attaching it to another. With few exceptions (such as a high-voltage power source), a wire with only one end attached to a circuit will do nothing; the hose remains capped on the free end, and thus adds nothing to the circuit. A
resistor is equivalent to a constriction in the bore of a pipe which requires more pressure to pass the same amount of water. All pipes have some resistance to flow, just as all wires and traces have some resistance to current. A node (or junction) in
Kirchhoff's junction rule is equivalent to a
pipe tee. The net flow of water into a piping tee (filled with water) must equal the net flow out. File:CapacitorHydraulicAnalogyAnimation.gif|
Capacitor: a flexible diaphragm sealed inside a pipe File:Pompe à palettes.gif|
Inductor: a rotary vane pump with a heavy rotor, or a turbine placed in the current File:Axial compressor.gif|
Voltage or current source: a dynamic pump with feedback control A
capacitor is equivalent to a tank with one connection at each end and a rubber sheet dividing the tank in two lengthwise (a
hydraulic accumulator). When water is forced into one pipe, equal water is simultaneously forced out of the other pipe, yet no water can penetrate the rubber diaphragm. Energy is stored by the stretching of the rubber. As more current flows "through" the capacitor, the back-pressure (voltage) becomes greater, thus current "leads" voltage in a capacitor. As the back-pressure from the stretched rubber approaches the applied pressure, the current becomes less and less. Thus capacitors "filter out" constant pressure differences and slowly varying, low-frequency pressure differences, while allowing rapid changes in pressure to pass through. An
inductor is equivalent to a
rotary vane pump with a heavy rotor placed in the current. The
mass of the rotor and the surface area of the vanes restricts the water's ability to rapidly change its rate of flow (current) through the pump due to the effects of
inertia, but, given time, a constant flowing stream will pass mostly unimpeded through the pump, as the rotor turns at the same speed as the water flow. The mass of the rotor and the surface area of its vanes are analogous to inductance, and friction between its axle and the axle bearings corresponds to the resistance that accompanies any non-superconducting inductor.An alternative inductor model is simply a long pipe, perhaps coiled into a spiral for convenience. This fluid-inertia device is used in real life as an essential component of a
hydraulic ram. The
inertia of the water flowing through the pipe produces the inductance effect; inductors "filter out" rapid changes in flow, while allowing slow variations in current to be passed through. The drag imposed by the walls of the pipe is somewhat analogous to
parasitic resistance. In either model, the pressure difference (voltage) across the device must be present before the current will start moving, thus in inductors, voltage "leads" current. As the current increases, approaching the limits imposed by its own internal friction and of the current that the rest of the circuit can provide, the pressure drop across the device becomes lower and lower. An ideal
voltage source (ideal
battery) or ideal
current source is a
dynamic pump with feedback control. A pressure meter on both sides shows that regardless of the current being produced, this kind of pump produces constant pressure difference. If one terminal is kept fixed at ground, another analogy is a large body of water at a high elevation, sufficiently large that the drawn water does not affect the water level. To create the analog of an ideal
current source, use a
positive displacement pump: A current meter (little
paddle wheel) shows that when this kind of pump is driven at a constant speed, it maintains a constant speed of the little paddle wheel.
Other circuit elements File:Electrionics Analogy - Valve (Diode, conducting).svg|A simple one-way ball-type check valve, in its "open" state acts as a diode in its conducting state File:Electrionics Analogy - Pressure-activated valve (Transistor).svg|A pressure-actuated valve combined with a one-way check valve acts as a (field-effect) transistor File:Electrionics Analogy - Valve (Diodes comparison).svg|Like a one-way check valve, a diode blocks current that flows the wrong way. Current that flows the right way goes through almost unchanged. File:Electrionics Analogy - Example Circuit.svg|A simple A/C circuit consisting of an oscillating pump, a "diode" valve, and a "capacitor" tank. Any kind of motor could be used here to drive the pump, as long as it oscillates. A
diode is equivalent to a one-way
check valve with a slightly leaky valve seat. As with a diode, a small pressure difference is needed before the valve opens. And like a diode, too much
reverse bias can damage or destroy the valve assembly. A
transistor is a valve in which a diaphragm, controlled by a low-current signal (either constant current for a
BJT or constant pressure for a
FET), moves a plunger which affects the current through another section of pipe.
CMOS is a combination of two
MOSFET transistors. As the input pressure changes, the pistons allow the output to connect to either zero or positive pressure. A
memristor is a
needle valve operated by a flow meter. As water flows through in the forward direction, the needle valve restricts flow more; as water flows the other direction, the needle valve opens further, providing less resistance.
Practical application On the basis of this analogy
Johan van Veen developed around 1937 a method to compute tidal currents with an electric analogue. After the
North Sea flood of 1953 in The Netherlands he elaborated this idea, which eventually lead to the analog computer
Deltar, which was used to make the hydraulic computations for the closures in the framework of the
Delta Works. == Principal equivalents ==