NCERT Solutions for Class 10 Science Chapter 11: Electricity
These Class 10 Science Chapter 11 solutions cover Electricity from the NCERT textbook (session 2026–27). You will find every in-text “Questions” set and the complete end-of-chapter “Exercises” reproduced word-for-word and solved step by step — including all Ohm’s-law, resistance, heating-effect and electric-power numericals worked out with correct units and verified answers.
Class 10 Science Chapter 11 Solutions – Overview
Chapter 11, Electricity, explains what constitutes electric current, how charges flow in a circuit, and the factors that control that flow. You learn that current is the rate of flow of charge, that a potential difference (set up by a cell or battery) drives the charges, and that every conductor offers some resistance. Ohm’s law links these three quantities (V = IR). The chapter then shows how resistance depends on a wire’s length, area of cross-section and material (resistivity), how resistors combine in series and parallel, and finally the heating effect of current (Joule’s law, H = I2Rt) and electric power (P = VI = I2R = V2/R), with the commercial unit kilowatt-hour. It is one of the most numerical-heavy chapters of Class 10 physics.
Key Concepts & Definitions
Electric current (I): the rate of flow of electric charge through a cross-section of a conductor, I = Q/t. SI unit: ampere (A); 1 A = 1 C s−1. Conventional current flows opposite to electron flow.
Electric charge (Q): measured in coulomb (C); 1 C ≈ charge of 6 × 1018 electrons; charge on one electron = 1.6 × 10−19 C.
Potential difference (V): work done to move a unit charge between two points, V = W/Q. SI unit: volt (V); 1 V = 1 J C−1. Measured by a voltmeter, connected in parallel.
Resistance (R): the property of a conductor that opposes the flow of charge, R = V/I. SI unit: ohm (Ω). Measured indirectly; current is measured by an ammeter connected in series.
Ohm’s law: at constant temperature, V ∝ I, so V = IR. The V–I graph is a straight line through the origin.
Resistivity (ρ): R = ρl/A; ρ is a property of the material (SI unit Ω m). Metals/alloys have low ρ; insulators very high ρ.
Electric power (P): rate of consumption of electrical energy, P = VI = I2R = V2/R. SI unit: watt (W). Commercial unit of energy: kilowatt-hour (kW h), 1 kW h = 3.6 × 106 J.
Important Formulas (Chapter 11)
Current: I = Q/t • Potential difference: V = W/Q
Ohm’s law: V = IR • R = V/I • I = V/R
Resistivity: R = ρl/A (A = πr2 = πd2/4 for a round wire)
Series: Rs = R1 + R2 + R3 + … (same current through each)
Parallel: 1/Rp = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 + … (same voltage across each)
Heating (Joule’s law): H = VIt = I2Rt • Power: P = VI = I2R = V2/R
Energy: 1 kW h = 1000 W × 3600 s = 3.6 × 106 J
In-text “Questions” — Answers
The questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook, grouped exactly as they appear after each section.
Page 172
1. What does an electric circuit mean?
2. Define the unit of current.
3. Calculate the number of electrons constituting one coulomb of charge.
Page 173
1. Name a device that helps to maintain a potential difference across a conductor.
2. What is meant by saying that the potential difference between two points is 1 V?
3. How much energy is given to each coulomb of charge passing through a 6 V battery?
Page 181
1. On what factors does the resistance of a conductor depend?
2. Will current flow more easily through a thick wire or a thin wire of the same material, when connected to the same source? Why?
3. Let the resistance of an electrical component remains constant while the potential difference across the two ends of the component decreases to half of its former value. What change will occur in the current through it?
4. Why are coils of electric toasters and electric irons made of an alloy rather than a pure metal?
5. Use the data in Table 11.2 to answer the following –(a) Which among iron and mercury is a better conductor?(b) Which material is the best conductor?
Page 185
1. Draw a schematic diagram of a circuit consisting of a battery of three cells of 2 V each, a 5 Ω resistor, an 8 Ω resistor, and a 12 Ω resistor, and a plug key, all connected in series.
2. Redraw the circuit of Question 1, putting in an ammeter to measure the current through the resistors and a voltmeter to measure the potential difference across the 12 Ω resistor. What would be the readings in the ammeter and the voltmeter?
Page 187
1. Judge the equivalent resistance when the following are connected in parallel – (a) 1 Ω and 106 Ω, (b) 1 Ω and 103 Ω, and 106 Ω.
2. An electric lamp of 100 Ω, a toaster of resistance 50 Ω, and a water filter of resistance 500 Ω are connected in parallel to a 220 V source. What is the resistance of an electric iron connected to the same source that takes as much current as all three appliances, and what is the current through it?
3. What are the advantages of connecting electrical devices in parallel with the battery instead of connecting them in series?
4. How can three resistors of resistances 2 Ω, 3 Ω, and 6 Ω be connected to give a total resistance of (a) 4 Ω, (b) 1 Ω?
5. What is (a) the highest, (b) the lowest total resistance that can be secured by combinations of four coils of resistance 4 Ω, 8 Ω, 12 Ω, 24 Ω?
Page 190
1. Why does the cord of an electric heater not glow while the heating element does?
2. Compute the heat generated while transferring 96000 coulomb of charge in one hour through a potential difference of 50 V.
3. An electric iron of resistance 20 Ω takes a current of 5 A. Calculate the heat developed in 30 s.
Page 192
1. What determines the rate at which energy is delivered by a current?
2. An electric motor takes 5 A from a 220 V line. Determine the power of the motor and the energy consumed in 2 h.
End-of-chapter “Exercises” — Solutions
1. A piece of wire of resistance R is cut into five equal parts. These parts are then connected in parallel. If the equivalent resistance of this combination is R′, then the ratio R/R′ is –(a) 1/25 (b) 1/5 (c) 5 (d) 25
2. Which of the following terms does not represent electrical power in a circuit?(a) I2R (b) IR2 (c) VI (d) V2/R
3. An electric bulb is rated 220 V and 100 W. When it is operated on 110 V, the power consumed will be –(a) 100 W (b) 75 W (c) 50 W (d) 25 W
4. Two conducting wires of the same material and of equal lengths and equal diameters are first connected in series and then parallel in a circuit across the same potential difference. The ratio of heat produced in series and parallel combinations would be –(a) 1:2 (b) 2:1 (c) 1:4 (d) 4:1
5. How is a voltmeter connected in the circuit to measure the potential difference between two points?
6. A copper wire has diameter 0.5 mm and resistivity of 1.6 × 10−8 Ω m. What will be the length of this wire to make its resistance 10 Ω? How much does the resistance change if the diameter is doubled?
7. The values of current I flowing in a given resistor for the corresponding values of potential difference V across the resistor are given below – Plot a graph between V and I and calculate the resistance of that resistor.
| I (amperes) | 0.5 | 1.0 | 2.0 | 3.0 | 4.0 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| V (volts) | 1.6 | 3.4 | 6.7 | 10.2 | 13.2 |
8. When a 12 V battery is connected across an unknown resistor, there is a current of 2.5 mA in the circuit. Find the value of the resistance of the resistor.
9. A battery of 9 V is connected in series with resistors of 0.2 Ω, 0.3 Ω, 0.4 Ω, 0.5 Ω and 12 Ω, respectively. How much current would flow through the 12 Ω resistor?
10. How many 176 Ω resistors (in parallel) are required to carry 5 A on a 220 V line?
11. Show how you would connect three resistors, each of resistance 6 Ω, so that the combination has a resistance of (i) 9 Ω, (ii) 4 Ω.
12. Several electric bulbs designed to be used on a 220 V electric supply line, are rated 10 W. How many lamps can be connected in parallel with each other across the two wires of 220 V line if the maximum allowable current is 5 A?
13. A hot plate of an electric oven connected to a 220 V line has two resistance coils A and B, each of 24 Ω resistance, which may be used separately, in series, or in parallel. What are the currents in the three cases?
14. Compare the power used in the 2 Ω resistor in each of the following circuits: (i) a 6 V battery in series with 1 Ω and 2 Ω resistors, and (ii) a 4 V battery in parallel with 12 Ω and 2 Ω resistors.
15. Two lamps, one rated 100 W at 220 V, and the other 60 W at 220 V, are connected in parallel to electric mains supply. What current is drawn from the line if the supply voltage is 220 V?
16. Which uses more energy, a 250 W TV set in 1 hr, or a 1200 W toaster in 10 minutes?
17. An electric heater of resistance 44 Ω draws 5 A from the service mains for 2 hours. Calculate the rate at which heat is developed in the heater.
18. Explain the following.(a) Why is the tungsten used almost exclusively for filament of electric lamps?(b) Why are the conductors of electric heating devices, such as bread-toasters and electric irons, made of an alloy rather than a pure metal?(c) Why is the series arrangement not used for domestic circuits?(d) How does the resistance of a wire vary with its area of cross-section?(e) Why are copper and aluminium wires usually employed for electricity transmission?
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. State Ohm’s law and write its mathematical form.
Q2. A current of 4 A flows through a 12 Ω resistor. Find the potential difference across it.
Q3. Why is an ammeter connected in series and a voltmeter in parallel?
Q4. How much charge flows when a current of 0.5 A passes for 4 minutes?
Q5. Define electric power and give its SI unit.
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Derive the expression for the equivalent resistance of three resistors connected in series.
Q2. Derive the expression for the equivalent resistance of three resistors connected in parallel.
Q3. State Joule’s law of heating and describe two practical applications of the heating effect of current.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The SI unit of electric charge is the:
(a) ampere (b) volt (c) coulomb (d) ohm
2. Ohm’s law gives the relation:
(a) V = I/R (b) V = IR (c) I = VR (d) R = IV
3. The resistance of a wire is doubled when its:
(a) length is halved (b) length is doubled (c) area is doubled (d) diameter is doubled
4. The commercial unit of electrical energy is the:
(a) watt (b) joule (c) kilowatt-hour (d) volt
5. In a series combination of resistors, the quantity that stays the same through each resistor is the:
(a) potential difference (b) current (c) power (d) resistance
6. Three resistors of 2 Ω each in parallel give an equivalent resistance of:
(a) 6 Ω (b) 2 Ω (c) 1 Ω (d) 2/3 Ω
7. The heat produced in a resistor is given by:
(a) IRt (b) I2Rt (c) IR2t (d) I2R/t
8. A device that protects a circuit from excessively high current is the:
(a) ammeter (b) voltmeter (c) rheostat (d) fuse
9. 1 kilowatt-hour is equal to:
(a) 3.6 × 103 J (b) 3.6 × 106 J (c) 1000 J (d) 3600 J
10. A bulb rated 60 W, 220 V has a resistance (approx.) of:
(a) 807 Ω (b) 220 Ω (c) 484 Ω (d) 60 Ω
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: An ammeter is always connected in series in a circuit.
Reason: An ammeter measures the current that flows through it and has very low resistance.
A-R 2. Assertion: The equivalent resistance in a parallel combination is less than the smallest resistor.
Reason: Adding more parallel paths provides more routes for current and lowers the total resistance.
A-R 3. Assertion: Heating elements of irons and toasters are made of nichrome.
Reason: Nichrome has a low melting point and oxidises quickly at high temperature.
A-R 4. Assertion: A thick wire has lower resistance than a thin wire of the same material and length.
Reason: Resistance is inversely proportional to the area of cross-section of the wire.
A-R 5. Assertion: Domestic appliances are connected in parallel.
Reason: Parallel connection lets each appliance get the full supply voltage and work independently.
Common Mistakes & Exam Tips
Common mistakes to avoid
- Forgetting to convert units — minutes to seconds, mA to A, mm to m — before substituting in formulas.
- Adding resistances directly in parallel; remember you add the reciprocals, then invert (1/Rp = Σ 1/R).
- Connecting the voltmeter in series or the ammeter in parallel — it is the other way round.
- Using the wrong power formula: when voltage is constant use P = V2/R; when current is constant use P = I2R.
- Assuming bulb power stays 100 W when the voltage changes — the resistance is fixed, so recalculate power from R.
- Confusing area with diameter: A ∝ d2, so doubling the diameter makes the area 4 times and resistance one-fourth.
How to score full marks in this chapter
Always write the formula, substitute values with units, and box the final answer with the correct unit. For combination problems, redraw the circuit and reduce step by step (parallel groups first, then series). State the units for each quantity (A, V, Ω, W, J). For graph questions, label both axes, draw a straight line through the origin and find resistance as the slope V/I. Learn the three forms of power (VI, I2R, V2/R) and choose the one that fits the given data.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Class 10 Science Chapter 11 Electricity about?
Chapter 11 explains electric current, potential difference, resistance and Ohm’s law (V = IR), how resistance depends on length, area and material (resistivity), how resistors combine in series and parallel, and the heating effect of current (H = I2Rt) and electric power (P = VI = I2R = V2/R).
How many numericals are there in Chapter 11 Electricity?
The end-of-chapter Exercises have 18 questions (most of them numericals on Ohm’s law, resistance, series/parallel combinations, heating and power), plus several in-text “Questions” sets. All of them are solved step by step with units on this page.
What is the unit of resistance and how is it defined?
The SI unit of resistance is the ohm (Ω). A conductor has a resistance of 1 Ω if a potential difference of 1 V across its ends drives a current of 1 A through it (R = V/I).
Are these Class 10 Science Chapter 11 solutions free?
Yes. All solutions are free and follow the official NCERT Science textbook for session 2026–27, with every exercise and numerical solved and verified.
