Malleability and Ductility: Some conductors, such as metals, are malleable and ductile, making them easy to shape and form into various configurations.
Metals are exemplary conductors due to their atomic structure. In a metal, the outer electrons of the atoms are not bound to any particular nucleus and are free to move throughout the material. When a potential difference is applied across the metal, these free electrons drift in response to the electric field, resulting in the flow of current.
Applications of Conductors
Conductors are utilized in various practical applications, including:
Apply scientific and engineering ideas to design, evaluate, and refine a device that minimizes the force on a macroscopic object during a collision.
Energy
Students who demonstrate understanding can:
Develop and use models to illustrate that energy at the macroscopic scale can be accounted for as either motions of particles or energy stored in fields.