Do conventional current and electron current flow in the same direction in an electric circuit?
The short answer is: No, they flow in opposite directions.
Here is a detailed breakdown of why:
In a typical electric circuit with metal wires (like copper), the charge carriers that are free to move are electrons.
Therefore, electron current flows from the negative terminal, through the circuit, to the positive terminal. This is what is actually happening inside the wires.
The concept of electricity was studied long before the electron was discovered in 1897. Scientists like Benjamin Franklin had to make an educated guess about the nature of electric flow.
Therefore, conventional current flows from the positive terminal, through the circuit, to the negative terminal.
By the time the electron was discovered and it was realized that the charge carriers in metals were negative and moved the "wrong" way, the conventional current model was already deeply established.
| Feature | Conventional Current | Electron Current (Electron Flow) |
| -------------------- | --------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------ |
| Direction of Flow | Positive (+) to Negative (-) | Negative (-) to Positive (+) |
| Charge Carrier | Assumed to be positive charges | Actual moving electrons (negative charge) |
| Basis | Historical convention from before the electron's discovery | The physical reality in metal conductors |
| Common Use | Most engineering, circuit diagrams, and formulas | Solid-state physics, chemistry, and introductory explanations |
Conclusion: When you look at a circuit diagram (schematic), all the arrows and calculations are based on conventional current (positive to negative). However, if you want to understand the physics of what's happening inside the wire, you need to think about electron current (negative to positive).