1
$\begingroup$

Suppose we have a regular pencil battery which supplies DC voltage $V$. Say we take copper wire and connect the ends of the battery to an $R$ ohms resistance.

Then Ohm's law tells use the current in the wire is $ \frac{V}{R}$.

This means as we keep decreasing the value of $R$, we will keep getting higher and higher values of current, since $V$ is fixed.

Now if we simply connect the ends of the battery by a copper wire without an intermediate resistance, of course the value of the current will not be infinity, but it will be $\frac{V}{R_{copper}}$ which is still very large.

The resistance of copper is so small that even for $V=1.5$ volts we will get current of larger than 1 Amp with copper. And according to this link 1 Amp can almost give you a heart attack.

So why is it that we dont hear about major accidents about people connecting two ends of a pencil battery with regular copper wire? Is there some fallacy in my reasoning above?

$\endgroup$
3
  • $\begingroup$ Body resistance is the main issue. Fatal current across the chest is typically stated at around 50 mA but you'd not be certain that 10 mA may not kill you. HOWEVER if you get spikes through skin and/or sweaty surface you can get death at well under 1 mA levels - maybe 100 uA. This is well documented in operating theatre training documentation. | Worst case recorded death with external contact occurred at 12V purposefully applied to the chest of a volunteer :-(. Resuscitation failed. | 50V is very adequate to kill you in adverse circumstances despite safety limits being set at or above 50V.... $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 5, 2015 at 11:30
  • $\begingroup$ .... 100VDC + is highly liable to be lethal. I've had 50 VDC on same hand (two tags brushed with hand in tight space) often - annoying to very annoying depending on humidity (Telecom wiring frame during engineering holiday jobs). I've had 230 VAC too many times (not for decades now) but not full hold (fortunately). I've had 100's of VDC various times and 1200 VDC once with gripping hand - due to stupidity on my part - I could easily have died on that one. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 5, 2015 at 11:34
  • $\begingroup$ I'd say that if you tried REALLY hard a 12V car battery carried with terminals against bare chest when hot and sweaty MIGHT kill you - and a 24V one more so. Probably not but I'd never do this for that reason if no other. 12V hand to hand seems almost certain to never kill - I'd not have thought I'd feel it BUT ... | A friend made a 12V LED lamp with an Al pole. He went flounder fishing - wading through knee deep salt water. A fault applied 12V via pole - water - legs - hand back to battery. He had a severe "cannot release" session and needed assistance. I imagine fatality possible there. $\endgroup$ Commented Aug 5, 2015 at 11:41

2 Answers 2

4
$\begingroup$

An ampere passing through your heart can give you a heart attack. An ampere passing through a wire will not.

The human body has a fairly large resistance ($10000\ \mathrm{\Omega}$ perhaps?), so the same voltage that can make a large current pass through a copper wire will not necessarily make any significant current flow through a person.

$\endgroup$
3
  • $\begingroup$ Thank you. Can we also say that if the battery has some kind of "inside" resistance R_in, the overall current in the battery is bounded by V/R_in and that for pencil batteries this maximum current turns out to be non-lethal? $\endgroup$ Commented May 12, 2013 at 17:58
  • 1
    $\begingroup$ @smilingbuddha, there is some internal resistance to any battery, and that will limit the total current the battery outputs exactly as you say. But that maximum current in general will be potentially lethal. And while you can measure the internal resistance of a battery, it is more difficult that just connecting it up to a single resistor. $\endgroup$ Commented May 12, 2013 at 18:46
  • $\begingroup$ Just came to say minor issue David: Though the average resistance of human body is around $10^4\Omega$, it's actually a variable resistor (i.e) its resistance is different at different parts of the body. In case of heart, several milliamperes is enough for our heart to shut down. More on hyper textbook $\endgroup$ Commented May 13, 2013 at 2:41
1
$\begingroup$

First, one additional point. It's not just $R_{copper}$ limiting current, but also the battery's internal resistance. This is modeled as one more resistor in series. For most small batteries you might get your hands on, it's less than one Ohm.

People playing with wire and low-voltage batteries don't get zapped because the resistance of Human, when contacted on more or less normal skin, is thousands to hundreds of thousands of Ohms.

For a contrasting point of view, one may try connecting the battery with wires (any metal) to one's tongue. (Best done as a thought experiment...)

When medics start a patient's heart with a zapper, they're using high voltages, hundreds to thousands of volts, to overcome skin contact resistance. On the other hand, contact with moist internal tissues means low resistance, dozens of Ohms probably, and small currents are enough to have interesting consequences. Read about pacemakers for more.

$\endgroup$

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.