:Conductivity
Conductivity refers to
the ability of a material to transmit energy. There are different types of
conductivity, including electrical, thermal, and acoustical
conductivity. The most electrically conductive element is silver,
followed by copper and gold. Silver also has the highest thermal conductivity
of any element and the highest light reflectance. Although it is the best conductor, copper and gold are used more often
in electrical applications because copper is less expensive and gold has a much
higher corrosion resistance.
Because silver
tarnishes, it is less desirable for high frequencies because the exterior
surface becomes less conductive.
As to why silver
is the best conductor, the answer is that its electrons are freer to move than
those of the other elements. This has to do with its valence and crystal
structure.
Most metals conduct
electricity. Other elements with high electrical conductivity are aluminum,
zinc, nickel, iron, and platinum. Brass and bronze are electrically
conductive alloys, rather than elements.
Table of the Conductive Order of Metals
This list of electric
conductivity includes alloys as well as pure elements. Because the size and
shape of a substance affect its conductivity, the list assumes all samples are
the same size. In order of most conductive to least conductive:
· Silver
· Copper
· Gold
· Aluminum
· Zinc
· Nickel
· Brass
· Bronze
· Iron
· Platinum
· Carbon Steel
· Lead
· Stainless Steel
Factors
That Affect Electrical Conductivity:
Certain factors can
affect how well a material conducts electricity.
- Temperature: Changing
temperature of silver or any other conductor alters its conductivity. In
general, increasing the temperature causes thermal excitation of the atoms
and decreases conductivity while increasing resistivity. The relationship
is linear, but it breaks down at low temperatures.
- Impurities: Adding
an impurity to a conductor decreases its conductivity. For example,
sterling silver is not as good of a conductor as pure silver. Oxidized
silver is not as good a conductor as untarnished silver. Impurities hinder
electron flow.
- Crystal structure and phases: If there are different phases of a material,
conductivity will slow slightly at the interface and may be different from
one structure than another. The way a material has been processed can
affect how well it conducts electricity.
- Electromagnetic fields: Conductors generate their own electromagnetic
fields when electricity runs through them, with the magnetic field
perpendicular to the electric field. External electromagnetic fields can
produce magnetoresistance, which can slow the flow of current.
- Frequency: The
number of oscillation cycles an alternating electrical current completes
per second is its frequency in Hertz. Above a certain level, a high
frequency can cause current to flow around a conductor rather than through
it (skin effect). Since there is no oscillation and hence no frequency,
the skin effect does not occur with direct current.
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