Current Electricity Class 12 Notes for Boards | IIT JEE | NEET
Current Electricity explains the flow of electric charge through conductors, covering concepts such as Ohm’s Law, resistance, EMF, Kirchhoff’s Laws, potentiometers, and electrical circuits, making it a crucial chapter for CBSE Boards, JEE Main, and NEET.
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What Is Current Electricity?
Current Electricity is Chapter 3 of Class 12 Physics as per the NCERT syllabus prescribed by CBSE. It builds directly on electrostatics concepts from Chapter 2 and introduces the physics of charges in motion through conductors.
The chapter carries significant weight in every major exam:
- CBSE Boards: 7–8 marks in theory + practicals
- JEE Main: 1–2 questions per paper, often from Kirchhoff's Laws, potentiometer, or meter bridge
- NEET: 1–2 questions, typically from Ohm's Law, combinations of resistances, or cell EMF
Understanding Current Electricity well is non-negotiable because several chapters that follow — Moving Charges and Magnetism, Electromagnetic Induction — assume you are comfortable with circuits, resistance, and EMF.
India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now
Notes of Current Electricity

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now

India's Best Exam Preparation for Class 12th - Download Now
Frequently Asked Questions
Find answers to common questions.
What are the most important topics in Current Electricity for JEE Main?
Kirchhoff's Laws, Wheatstone Bridge, potentiometer, and combinations of resistors are the highest-frequency topics in JEE Main from this chapter. According to NTA's official syllabus, all of these fall under Unit 5 of the JEE Main Physics syllabus. Students who practice at least 30–40 problems across these four areas consistently score full marks from this chapter.
How many questions come from Current Electricity in NEET?
NEET typically has 1–2 questions from Current Electricity each year. These questions are mostly application-based — involving Ohm's Law, simple circuit analysis, or EMF and internal resistance of cells. Deep derivations like drift velocity are rarely asked directly in NEET, but the concept underpins many question
Is NCERT enough for Current Electricity for Class 12 Boards?
Yes, NCERT is sufficient for CBSE Board exams. Read the theory carefully, solve all NCERT examples and exercises, and practice the practical-based questions on metre bridge and potentiometer. The board paper rarely goes beyond NCERT scope for this chapter. Use the NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Physics to verify your working.
What is the difference between EMF and terminal voltage?
EMF (E) is the maximum potential difference a cell can deliver when no current flows — it is a property of the cell itself. Terminal voltage (V) is the actual voltage across the cell's terminals when current flows, given by V = E − Ir, where r is internal resistance and I is current. When a cell is being charged, terminal voltage exceeds EMF: V = E + Ir.
How is the potentiometer better than a voltmeter?
A potentiometer measures EMF without drawing any current from the source at the balance point, making it a null-deflection method. A voltmeter always draws a small current, which lowers the terminal voltage slightly and introduces a measurement error. This is why a potentiometer gives a more accurate value of EMF, and this distinction is a favourite board and JEE question.
