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Question: Two wires of same radius having lengths \({l_1}\) and \({l_2}\) and resistivities \({\rho _1}\) and ...

Two wires of same radius having lengths l1{l_1} and l2{l_2} and resistivities ρ1{\rho _1} and ρ2{\rho _2} are connected in series. The equivalent resistivity will be
(A). ρ1l2+ρ2l1ρ1ρ2\dfrac{{{\rho _1}{l_2} + {\rho _2}{l_1}}}{{{\rho _1}{\rho _2}}}
(B). ρ1l1+ρ2l2l1+l2\dfrac{{{\rho _1}{l_1} + {\rho _2}{l_2}}}{{{l_1} + {l_2}}}
(C). ρ1l1ρ2l2l1l2\dfrac{{{\rho _1}{l_1} - {\rho _2}{l_2}}}{{{l_1} - {l_2}}}
(D). ρ1l2+ρ2l1l1+l2\dfrac{{{\rho _1}{l_2} + {\rho _2}{l_1}}}{{{l_1} + {l_2}}}

Explanation

Solution

- Hint: Resistance of a wire depends on factors like its resistivity, area of cross section, length. Resistivity differs from material to material. The wires are connected in series, and they have same radius (area) therefore this is equivalent to a circuit with lengthl1+l2{l_1} + {l_2}, area AA with resistivity ρequivalent.\rho {}_{equivalent.} .We use the equation of ReffectiveR{}_{effective}when connected in series.

Formula used
R=ρ×lAR = \dfrac{{\rho \times l}}{A}, where RRis the resistance of the wire, ρ\rho is the resistivity of the wire, ll is the length of the wire and AA is the area of cross section of the wire.
Reffective=R1+R2+R3....+RnR{}_{effective} = {R_1} + {R_2} + {R_3}.... + {R_n} .Here ReffectiveR{}_{effective} is the effective resistance when n resistors are connected in series.R1R{}_1, R2{R_2}…. Rn{R_n} are their respective resistances.

Complete step-by-step solution -
Resistance is the measure of opposition of current in a circuit. The higher the resistance the lower will be the current flow and vice versa. Resistivity is the resistive power of the material to oppose or hinder the flow of current. Resistance is directionally proportional to the length i.e. the longer the wire, more resistance it experiences and hence lower current flow and vice versa. Similarly as the area of the cross section increases the resistance decreases. This implies that the area of cross section is inversely proportional to area of cross section. Thus we can sayR=ρ×lAR = \dfrac{{\rho \times l}}{A}, where RRis the resistance of the wire, ρ\rho is the resistivity of the wire, ll is the length of the wire and AA is the area of cross section of the wire. Let AA be the area of both the wires, their respective lengths be l1{l_1} and l2{l_2} , their resistivities be ρ1\rho {}_1 and ρ2\rho {}_2
Therefore R1=ρ1×l1A{R_1} = \dfrac{{{\rho _1} \times {l_1}}}{A}andR2=ρ2×l2A{R_2} = \dfrac{{{\rho _2} \times {l_2}}}{A} . Let the effective resistance be Reffective=ρequivalent×(l1+l2)A{R_{effective}} = \dfrac{{{\rho _{equivalent}} \times ({l_1} + {l_2})}}{A}
We know,Reffective=R1+R2+R3....+RnR{}_{effective} = {R_1} + {R_2} + {R_3}.... + {R_n} .Here ReffectiveR{}_{effective} is the effective resistance when n resistors are connected in series.R1R{}_1, R2{R_2}…. Rn{R_n} are their respective resistances.
Here there are two resistances therefore Reffective=R1+R2R{}_{effective} = {R_1} + {R_2}
Substituting ρequivalent×(l1+l2)A=ρ1×l1A+ρ2×l2A\dfrac{{{\rho _{equivalent}} \times ({l_1} + {l_2})}}{A} = \dfrac{{{\rho _1} \times {l_1}}}{A} + \dfrac{{{\rho _2} \times {l_2}}}{A}
AA AA area of cross section , which is common in both sides cancels out and by rearranging we get
ρequivalent=ρ1×l1+ρ2×l2(l1+l2){\rho _{equivalent}} = \dfrac{{{\rho _1} \times {l_1} + {\rho _2} \times {l_2}}}{{({l_1} + {l_2})}}
Thus the correct answer is B

Note: All materials resist flow of current but at different levels. Based on how freely the current is flowing in a wire it is classified into groups. Conductors offer very little resistance and electrons move freely in a conductor. Aluminum , gold are some of the examples. Insulators offer high resistance and resistance to the flow of electrons. Wood, plastic are some examples. A semiconductor material has a resistance value falling between that of a conductor and an insulator, such as glass.