An electrical experiment for Easter

If I have missed something, please let me know.

Introduction

Electrocution has been reported due to the use of a mobile phone in a bath whilst it is plugged into a charger (https://www.rte.ie/news/2025/1001/1536213-inquest-anne-marie-ogorman/). The aim of this study was to establish whether the output of a mobile phone charger can present a risk to the user.

Method

A 5% solution of sodium chloride was placed in stainless steel bowl. The bowl was connected to the earth pin of a twin BS 1363 socket-outlet via an ammeter with a 10 mA full-scale deflection (Avometer Eight Mk 6). A USB charger (Apple Model A1696) was plugged into the adjacent socket-outlet. A USB-C to USB-C cable was plugged into the charger and the other end was immersed in the sodium chloride solution. The charger was energized.

Correct function of the charger was confirmed after the experiment. Confirmation that the earth was effective was obtained by measuring the earth fault loop impedance at the socket outlet.

Results

No current flow was detected. The EFLI was 0.80 ohms.

Discussion

These findings do not confirm the hypothesis that the use of a mobile phone which is connected to a charger whilst taking a bath gives rise to a risk of an electric shock. It may be that the risk exists only if the individual is in contact with the charger itself, or the charger becomes immersed. Further work is required to investigate this alternative hypothesis.

Parents
  • Cheap replacement chargers are the most suspicious for needing a test.

    Those from leading brands that provide mobile phones are unlikely to have such 'obvious(?)' galvanic failure modes.

    Other fault conditions are possible. It's easy to blame the wrong end of the stick when poking it in a socket. (I remember a historical incident with live Christmas Lights and child standing on bare radiator pipes to reach the tree, and 'blaming' the fault on the radiator pipes now being earthed)

Reply
  • Cheap replacement chargers are the most suspicious for needing a test.

    Those from leading brands that provide mobile phones are unlikely to have such 'obvious(?)' galvanic failure modes.

    Other fault conditions are possible. It's easy to blame the wrong end of the stick when poking it in a socket. (I remember a historical incident with live Christmas Lights and child standing on bare radiator pipes to reach the tree, and 'blaming' the fault on the radiator pipes now being earthed)

Children
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