(Redirected from Drain-pipe theory)The electronic 'Hydraulic analogy' (derisively referred to as the 'Drain-pipe theory' by
Oliver Heaviside) is the most widely used analogy for "''electron fluid''" in a metal conductor. Since
electric current is invisible and the processes at play in
electronics are often difficult to understand in an intuitive way, it is common to teach electronics using analogies to everyday objects and processes. The
analogy is made to a
hydraulic system of water in pipes. The "electron fluid" in a metal conductor has many similarities to such a system, and the various
electronic components have similar hydraulic equivalents. Electricity (as well as heat) was originally understood to be a kind of fluid. This ''hydraulic analogy'' is still of some use in teaching, not only for the fact that the names of the quantities are often struck by analogy. The water analogy is very useful in describing some aspects of electricity, but it breaks down for others.
Basic ideas
There are two basic paradigms:
★ Version with pressure induced by gravity. Large tanks of water that are held up high, and the potential energy of the water
head is the pressure source. This is reminiscent of electrical diagrams with an up arrow pointing to +V, grounded pins that otherwise are not shown connecting to anything, and so on.
★ Completely enclosed version with pumps providing pressure only; no gravity. This is reminiscent of a circuit diagram with a voltage source shown and the wires actually completing a circuit.
Component equivalents
;
Wires : All pipes are completely full of water, and none ever has an open end. If a pipe were to go somewhere without reconnecting to the circuit, it would have to have a cap on the end. This is because the wall of the pipe is like an insulator, and a wire just sticking out into insulating space/air is like a completely pipe-surrounded rod of water.
;
Potential : Equivalent to
pressure.
;
Voltage : Also called ''potential difference''. A difference in pressure between two points
;
Current : Equivalent to a hydraulic
mass flow rate; that is, the quantity of flowing water over time.
; Ideal
voltage source : A pump with a pressure meter on both sides. It varies the speed of the pump to keep the difference in pressure constant.
; Ideal
current source : Also a pump, but with a current meter (little
paddle wheel). The pump changes speed to maintain a constant speed of the little paddle wheel.
;
Resistor : A pipe with a small width. "So what makes this different from a regular-width pipe?". More water-preassure required to get the same amount of water through the pipe but it will flow faster (as less water gets through at the time). All pipes have some resistance, just like all wires have some resistance.

A capacitor driven by an AC source through a diode.
;
Diode : One-way valve or
check valve. If it has a rubber flap it can be blown out permanently by too much
reverse bias, which is similar to the real thing.
;
Capacitor : Big spherical tanks with a sheet of thick rubber separating the two halves.
;
Inductor : All flowing water has
inertia, which has similar effects to inductance. A large, heavy, frictionless paddle wheel is like a dedicated inductor. As you try to increase a DC current, you encounter resistance as you speed up the paddle wheel, but after it is going, you can send a current at the same speed as the paddle wheel with no effort. If you try to put AC through it, the wheel will present a great resistance, as its inertia prevents you from moving it back and forth. Any real paddle wheel will have some friction associated with it, just as any real inductor has some resistance. The
DC to DC converter uses inductance to change voltage in the way that a
Hydraulic ram uses inertia to change pressure.
;
Transistor : A device similar to an
EGR valve, where a diaphragm controlled by a low-current signal (either constant current —
BJT, or constant pressure —
FET) moves a plunger which allows a larger current to flow through another section of pipe, like a
globe valve.
;
CMOS : A combination of two
MOSFET transistors. As the input pressure changes, the pistons allow the output to connect to either zero or positive pressure.
Principle equivalents
; EM wave speed (
velocity of propagation) :
Speed of sound in water. When a light switch is flipped, the electric wave travels very quickly through the wires.
; Charge flow speed : Particle speed of water. The moving charges themselves move rather slowly.
;
DC : Constant flow of water in a circuit of pipe
;
Low frequency AC : Water oscillating back and forth in a pipe
;
Higher-frequency AC and
transmission lines :
Sound being transmitted through the water pipes
; Inductive spark : Used in
induction coils, similar to
water hammer, caused by the inertia of water
Equation examples
Some examples of equivalent electrical and hydraulic equations:
{| class="wikitable"
!type
!
hydraulic
!
electric
!
thermal
|-
|
quantity
|
volume [m
3]
|
charge [C]
|
heat [J]
|-
|
potential
|
pressure [Pa=J/m
3]
|
potential [V=J/C]
|
temperature [K=J/
]
|-
|flux
|
current [m
3/s]
|
current [A=C/s]
|
heat transfer rate [J/s]
|-
|flux density
|
velocity [m/s]
|
current density [C/m
2s]
|
heat flux [J/m
2s]
|-
|linear model
|
Poiseuille's law
|
Ohm's law
|
Fourier's law
|}
Limits to the analogy
If taken too far, the water analogy can create misconceptions. For it to be useful, we must remain aware of the regions where electricity and water behave very differently.
;
Fields : Electrons can push or pull other distant electrons via their fields, while water molecules experience forces only from direct contact with other molecules. For this reason, waves in water travel at the speed of sound, but waves in a sea of charge will travel much faster as the forces from one electron are applied to many distant electrons and not to only the neighbors in direct contact. In a hydraulic transmission line, the energy flows as mechanical waves through the water, but in an electric transmission line the energy flows as fields in the space surrounding the wires, and does not flow inside the metal. Also, an accelerating electron will drag its neighbors along while attracting them, both because of magnetic forces.
; Leaking pipes: If a hole is made in a hydraulic system, the water can leak out. But the movable charges present within electrical conductors are always attracted to unmoving opposite charges in the material. The "electric fluid" can be forcibly removed from metals, but enormous voltages arise if even a tiny amount is removed. For this reason, the surfaces of conductors act as if they always have a high energy-barrier preventing leaks. Also for this reason, continuing electric currents require closed loops rather than hydraulics' open source/sink resembling spigots and buckets.
; Fluid Velocity : As with water hoses, the carrier drift velocity in conductors is directly proportional to current. However, charges' velocity within a conductor is typically less than centimeters per minute, and the "electrical friction" is extremely high. If charges ever flowed as fast as water can flow in pipes, the amperage would be immense, and the conductors would become incandescently hot and perhaps vaporize. To model the resistance and the charge-velocity of metals, perhaps a pipe packed with damp sand would be a better analogy than a clean, water-filled pipe.
;
Quantum Mechanics : Conductors and insulators contain charges at more than one
quantized level of atomic orbit energy, while the water in one region of a pipe can only have a single value of pressure. For this reason there is no hydraulic explanation for such things as a
battery's charge pumping ability, a
diode's voltage drop,
solar cell functions,
Peltier effect, etc.
External links
Good analogy
★
Hyperphysics
★
Hyperphysics 2 — Doesn't have the confusing reservoir.
★
Reinventing constant current source by using a set of eight consecutive logically connected water analogies.
★
With animations! — The paddle behaves like a resistor if the paddle itself is massless and has friction, and like an inductor if it is frictionless and has mass. Also has equivalent equations.
★
Ohm's law
★
Capacitor analogy
★
Newsgroup thread with lots of good analogies and a few bad ones
Acceptable analogy
★
Understanding Electricity — an analogy with water
★
Water analogy to transistors Slightly better version would be something like an
EGR valve
★
Basic circuit theory
★
Measuring electricity
★
Plumbing analogy
★
Animation