ElectricityTopic Summary

Knowledge Organiser: Mains Electricity and Safety

Part of Mains Electricity & Safety · GCSE GCSE Physics revision

This topic summary covers Knowledge Organiser: Mains Electricity and Safety within Mains Electricity & Safety for GCSE Physics. Revise Mains Electricity & Safety in Electricity for GCSE Physics with 13 exam-style questions and 30 flashcards. This is a high-frequency topic, so it is worth revising until the explanation feels precise and repeatable. It is section 18 of 18 in this topic. Use this topic summary to connect the idea to the wider topic before moving on to questions and flashcards.

Topic position

Section 18 of 18

Practice

13 questions

Recall

30 flashcards

Knowledge Organiser: Mains Electricity and Safety

Key Terms
  • AC: Alternating current — direction reverses
  • DC: Direct current — one direction only
  • Fuse: Melts to break circuit if I too high
  • Earth wire: Safety path for fault current
  • Double insulation: Plastic case, no earth needed
Wire Colours
  • Live = brown (dangerous)
  • Neutral = blue (~0 V)
  • Earth = green and yellow
  • Fuse on the LIVE wire only
UK Mains Values
  • 230 V (RMS)
  • 50 Hz
  • AC (not DC)
  • Peak voltage ≈ 325 V (Higher)
Exam Tips
  • Fuse rating: I = P/V, then choose just above
  • Earth wire causes large current → blows fuse
  • Circuit breaker = resettable fuse
  • Double insulated = no earth needed
Key Equations
  • I = P ÷ V (to calculate correct fuse rating)
  • V_peak = V_rms × √2 (peak voltage from RMS)
  • UK mains: 230 V RMS, 50 Hz, peak ~325 V
  • P = I × V (power in electrical circuit)
Common Mistakes
  • Choosing a fuse rating that is too low: The fuse must be rated just above the normal operating current — too low and it blows during normal use; too high and it fails to protect
  • Confusing earth and neutral wires: The neutral wire completes the circuit; the earth wire is a safety wire that only carries current during a fault
  • Saying AC and DC are interchangeable: Mains electricity is AC (alternating current); batteries supply DC (direct current) — they are not the same
  • Forgetting that 230 V is the RMS value: The peak voltage of UK mains is ~325 V — the 230 V quoted is the root mean square (RMS) value
  • Thinking double-insulated devices are safer in all situations: Double insulation means no earth wire is needed — it does not mean no fuse is needed

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Read this section alongside the surrounding pages in Mains Electricity & Safety. That gives you the full topic sequence instead of a single isolated revision point.

Practice Questions for Mains Electricity & Safety

What does AC stand for, and how does it differ from DC?

  • A. Alternating current; it flows at a higher voltage than DC
  • B. Alternating current; it repeatedly changes direction, whereas DC flows in one direction only
  • C. Adapted current; it is produced only by batteries
  • D. Alternating current; it flows at a constant rate, whereas DC changes direction
1 markfoundation

Explain how a fuse protects an electrical circuit from damage.

2 marksstandard

Quick Recall Flashcards

What is DC?
Direct Current — current flows in one direction only (batteries provide DC)
What is AC?
Alternating Current — current direction reverses constantly (50 times/second in UK)

13 questions on Mains Electricity & Safety — practise free

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