MISCONCEPTION: Electricity that is generated at the power station flows inside metal wires to power outlets in homes and businesses, where it is used up by lamps and other electrical appliances.
CORRECT UNDERSTANDING: In DC circuits and in 50Hz AC circuits (including 240V and higher domestic & commercial power in Australia), the 'current' exists all through the entire wire.
Electronics students commonly assume that this means electrical energy flows INSIDE the metal wires, but this is not right.
*Physics students have a different understanding.* The scientific explanation is that electrical energy normally doesn't flow inside of metals. In fact, the 'joules' being sent out by batteries and generators are located in empty space: they take the form of electromagnetic fields surrounding the wires.
Similarly, batteries don't supply 'electricity' - the wires themselves supply that from their own substance.
A battery is a chemically-fuelled 'charge pump'. Like any other kind of pump, a battery takes charges in through one connection and spits them out through the other.
A battery or a generator is NOT the source of the substance or 'stuff' being pumped.
As per this reference: A. Sommerfeld (1952) has pointed out, metals are good conductors of CURRENT but non-conductors of ENERGY.
Metals conduct CURRENT but space conducts ENERGY and the best conductor of electromagnetic (EM) ENERGY is the vacuum!
When we turn on a lamp or other electrical device from a remote switch, we don't have to wait for electrons to complete a journey because the electrons are not given the ENERGY in the first place.
There are two valid schools of thought about how one should conceptualise energy and energy
transfer, that I will call:
the 'accountant’s model'
and the 'field model'.
The accountants view energy solely as a mathematical attribute of physical systems, and it does not need any kind of conceptual model beyond that.
The story of energy transfer from the battery to the globe goes like this. When the battery is first connected to complete the circuit it pushes electrons (charge) around so that they pile up on the surfaces of some parts of the circuit, leaving a deficit of electrons, and hence a positive charge on other parts of the conductors’ surfaces. This pushing around of electrons is mediated by the electric field. The charge separation in turn produces electric field inside the connecting wires as well as in the wire filament of the light globe.
The internal electric field is directed along the axis of the wires and is responsible for producing a drift of mobile charge carriers, current, in the wires.
To explain energy transfer we need to look at what is happening outside the wires.
As a consequence of the surface charges on the wires, there is an electric field in the space outside the wires (as well as inside).
Also, as a consequence of having a current in the wires, there is a magnetic field in the space around the wires. It is this combination of electric field and magnetic field in the space outside the wires that carries the energy from battery to globe.
Once the fields are set up, the energy travels through space, perpendicular to both the electric field and the magnetic field, at the speed of light.
Energy leaves through the sides of the battery and enters the wire of the globe through the sides of the wire.
As Arnold Sommerfeld (1952) has pointed out, metals are good conductors of current but non-conductors of energy. Metals conduct current but space conducts energy and the best conductor of electromagnetic energy is the vacuum!
Reference: Science Teachers’ Workshop 2002 Understanding Circuits What the Text Books Don’t Tell You - Ian M. Sefton School of Physics, The University of Sydney
Reference: Energy transfer in electrical circuits: A qualitative account - 2005
The application of the surface charge model to a simple circuit shows that electromagnetic energy flows from both terminals of the battery, mainly in the vicinity of the wires ~and not inside them! to the load where it enters and is converted into heat at a rate obtained from Ohm’s law. © 2005 American Association of Physics Teachers.
http://sites.huji.ac.il/science/stc/staff_h/Igal/Research%20Articles/Pointing-AJP.pdf
Also see: IN A SIMPLE CIRCUIT, WHERE DOES THE ENERGY FLOW?