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Giz Explains: How Electrocution Really Kills You
| posts about #howelectricitykillsyou more → |
Giz Explains: How Electrocution Really Kills You |
05/23/09
1) It's the current that does the damage, not the voltage. That's why a 20,000 V static shock makes you jump, but doesn't do any harm - there's almost no current involved and the duration is very short.
2) Research has shown that current in the range from 0.007-0.015 A (7-15 milliamps) AC, when passed through the heart, is enough to cause the arrhythmia that was described. DC current will tend to cause the muscles to freeze, stopping the heart, but also preventing a person from releasing the live object. Ground Fault Circuit Interrupters, commonly installed in bathrooms and laundry rooms in new homes, are designed to trip nearly instantaneously (5-10 ms typically) when they detect 5-7 mA of current flowing to ground. Below those levels they may still trip, but it will take longer. this is done because the risk of injury is lower at lower current levels and nuisance tripping of the device tends to make people remove them, increasing the risk of death to anyone using the area.
3) Current levels above 15 mA, up to about 1000 mA (1 A), don't generally do much more harm than the 7-15 mA current. Currents above 1000 mA start to do damage by causing internal burns due to the heating caused by the current flowing through the body's internal resistance.
4) Higher frequency current does more damage. As the frequency of an AC current increases, a curious thing happens called "skin effect". This happens in a copper wire or in any other conductor, including the human body. The current, instead of flowing more or less evenly through the full cross section of the conductor as it does at DC begins to crowd outward toward the outer perimeter of the conductor. The higher the frequency gets, the more intense the crowding at the surface gets. This causes much higher heating at the surface of the conductor than at the core. In the human body, this causes the burns to be through the thickness of the skin and into the outer layers of the muscle. So current that at 60 Hz (North American Power Line Frequency) might make you sore the next day, presuming it didn't kill you, at 400 Hz (aircraft power frequency) might result in severe burns to the skin. As the frequency gets higher the effect increases. Contact with high-power, high-frequency radio transmitter antennas like those found on cell-phone towers (around 1 GHz) can result in severe burns, although the fall from the tower is probably what will kill you.
5) High frequencies can jump air gaps more effectively than DC or power line frequencies, so shocks from high power radio frequency sources are more likely than from low frequency sources or DC.
6) Ground conductors on products and equipment are designed to minimize the touch voltage on the metal surfaces of a product to less than 50 V to help prevent shocks. They also cause the circuit breaker or fuse that protects the equipment to blow very quickly, limiting the time that a person can be exposed to the shock hazard. Don't cut ground pins off power cords, or use 2-pin too 3-pin adapters. You are risking your life or that of someone you love!
09/07/09
05/20/09
Good times.
05/20/09
Ok, I am rusty as hell, but WTF? You can have more volts and/or more amps - and an increase in either (or both) will up the wattage. Car batteries have relatively low voltage, but a lot of amps. Wall socket has relatively high voltage and low amps.
05/20/09
05/20/09
It is hard to imagine our world without electricity today, and I take small comfort in the fact that we can have a lifetime of fun with it until the 7 milliamps takes the lifetime away.
05/20/09
And they hurt like shit to touch. As does a ringing phone line.
05/20/09
Please for the love of FSM never use that FSMdamn analogy ever again. You're making people stupider by using it. Trust me on this. Find a better way to explain the information.
And more volts does not = more amps. They are two completely separate and independent values of each other. Which is why your car battery (DC) can dump out 800+ amps of energy at 12 volts. 800 amps at 12 volts = 9600 Watts
110 volts at 20 amps = 2200 Watts.
220 volts at 40 amps = 8800 Watts
See? Look, more volts != more amps!
05/20/09
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05/20/09
And what's wrong with more volts = more amps? Take the equation:
V = IR
Wouldn't you say that voltage is directly proportional to the current given constant resistance?
05/20/09
05/20/09
Well, it's mostly from going by Ohm's law, usually applied linearly, where more volts implies more amperage when you assume a constant resistance. And vice-versa.
Though I agree that the analogy probably isn't necessary, since highschoolers usually have an easy enough time understanding the difference between electric potential and electric current.
05/20/09
Also, higher voltage does yield higher amperage for a given resistance! I believe this was the intent of the statement.
05/20/09
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05/20/09
I'm actually an electrical engineer, and I frankly love it. I've spent hours with my Mechanical colleagues trying to figure out how proper the analogy is, pointing out the flaws, and expanding it to accommodate the more advanced electrical principles (power, energy, capacitance, inductance, etc...) It CAN be done, and it makes for some great brain teasing! My current position is capacitors as an in-line bladder/balloon (stores water, holds pressure), and inductors as an in-line, frictionless turbine (holds flow through the momentum of the blades).. think about it.
The fact is, this can be a very useful and and illustrating analogy, if you have the right audience, and are able to present it properly.
PS: Sorry for the double-post.. finally figured out how to reply directly to a comment.
05/20/09
I'd really rather not discuss capacities of my in-line bladder, thank you.
05/20/09
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05/20/09
ring ring
Hey Adam TOM thinks that sharks cant smell, whats the verdict"?
05/20/09
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05/20/09
And no, you don't really have to worry other than your house ground is likely your cold water pipe.
05/20/09
05/20/09
I'm sorry, what were we talking about?
05/20/09
Actually, pretty cool information. I'm currently fraying all of the electrical cords in my home right now and hooking them to my Wii's Dance Dance mat for some hardcore "Dance or Die" to play with the kids.
3 milliseconds eh? Lets see how well you react to having to dance to "Crazy Frog"....
05/20/09
05/20/09
/wait, I read the article, I just have no comprehension.
05/20/09
05/20/09