I've read several other previous posts about this, and none of them seem to address the exact conceptual doubt I'm having, so I'll take a shot at posting this...
Question: How can we have high voltage as well as low current?
Situation: a hydroelectric generating dam generates 13.8kV and steps it up to 138kV, so winding ratio is 1:10. Neglecting losses, by conservation of energy we have that
P_in = P_out.
Or
I_inV_in = I_outV_out, I_out = (V_in/V_out)I_in => 0.1I_in = I_out
--> So we have 10% the current but at the same power, which is great because this reduces I^2*R losses and we can therefore use cables rated at lower ampacity, saving $, materials, and energy. I get all of this, and I think I understand how transformers and generators work, but...
Here's where I get confused:
Now my understanding of voltage comes from the path-integral definition, which states that it's the work necessary to move a charge, per unit charge, along a path against a conservative electric field (very analogous to gravitational potential energy):
And my microscopic understanding of charge carrier motion comes from the relation of drift velocity to the electric field
(2) V_d = uE,
where V_d is the average drift velocity, u is the electron mobility, and E is the electric field.
And finally my microscopic understanding of current is a function of drift velocity
(3) I = neAV_d,
(where n is electron density, e electron charge, A cross sectional area of conductor).
My confusion:
A) If we increase voltage V, we must increase electric field E, since V is proportional to E (1).
B) If we increase E, then we must increase V_d, since V_d is proportional to E (2).
C) If we increase V_d, we must increase I, since I is proportional to V_d (3).
Therefore: if we increase V, since A)--implies-->C), we must increase I.
==> So -- how can we have high voltage as well as low current, or how can we raise the voltage without raising the current?
(I must be missing something, because I know we do it, and I get how transformers exploit Faraday's law to transform voltages. Perhaps is it the load at the end of the line that has a large impedance, and this is what limits the current on the secondary? All of the residences, businesses, etc, that are drawing power? Is this one of the reason why supply must match demand?)