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conductor (science)
(redirected from Electrical conductor)

   Also found in: Medical, Wikipedia 0.02 sec.

conductor

Any material that conducts heat or electricity (as opposed to an insulator, or nonconductor). A good conductor has a high electrical or heat conductivity, and is generally a substance rich in loosely-held free electrons, such as a metal. Copper and aluminium are good conductors. A poor conductor (such as the non-metals glass, porcelain, and rubber) has few free electrons and resists the flow of electricity or heat. Carbon is exceptional in being non-metallic and yet (in some of its forms) a relatively good conductor of heat and electricity. Substances such as silicon and germanium, with intermediate electrical conductivities that are improved by heat, light, or impurities, are known as semiconductors.

Liquids (including water) can also be electrical conductors. Electricity (current) can flow by the movement of charged ions through a solution or a molten salt (electrolyte). This process is called electrolysis.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Lightning currents tend to pass in long electrical conductors -- particularly ones that are on or near the surface of the earth.
Microprocessors built with copper provide superior performance to those that contain traditional aluminum because copper is a better electrical conductor than aluminum.
NEWHALL - A four-foot gopher snake dangling from the claws of a hawk Tuesday morning served as an electrical conductor - and the cause of a small brush fire in Newhall, a fire official said.
 
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