Graphite Circuits
Use the graphite in pencil lead to create an electrical circuit through your drawings.
This activity may be Fiddly and Flashing
Use the graphite in pencil lead to create an electrical circuit through your drawings.
This activity may be Fiddly and Flashing
What will I need?
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What happens if you place the LED on different parts of your picture?
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What happens if you make the drawing with harder (eg 4H) or softer (eg 6B) pencils?
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Can you connect more than one LED in a circuit? Could you light up a whole picture?
Pencil ‘lead’ is made of graphite mixed with clay. Graphite is a form of carbon, and is a conductor of electricity: the carbon atoms’ electrons can move within the material. The pencil line on the paper is a continuous trail of graphite. This trail is a route along which electrons flow—from the negative to the positive terminal of the battery—forming an electric current that lights the LED.
Graphite is only a fairly good conductor, and longer circuits have more resistance to current flow. That’s why touching the crocodile clip at different points along the line can make the LED brighter or dimmer.
There are electric circuits throughout your home, taking electricity to and from lights, toasters, televisions and lots of other things. Those circuits are made of copper wire, not the graphite from a pencil.