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Published byHarry Walker Modified over 9 years ago
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Cells and Batteries A cell is a unit which includes two electrodes and one electrolyte.
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In your fruit battery the electrodes were the metal strips and the electrolyte was the juice in the fruit.
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When two or more cells are connected together, the combination is called a cell.
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Dry cells are connected in series to obtain a larger amount of energy and a higher electric potential (voltage). Batteries are made of a serious of cells. A 9 volt, has 6 cells that produced 1.5V each (1.5V x 6 cells = 9V).
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When dry cells are connected in series, the electric potential (voltage) increases by 1.5V each time a new cell is added to the set of dry cells. The amount of energy in the battery increases each time a new dry cell is added.
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Electrochemical Cells Primary Secondary - Single use- Multiple use - Can be discharged but not recharged - Can be discharged and recharged - Only one chemical reaction - 2 chemical processes; one to discharge, one to recharge
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List advantages and disadvantages of each Primary Secondary Advantage: - Has only one chemical reaction Advantage: - Can be used multiple times Disadvantage: - Can only be used once Disadvantage: - Has 2 chemical processes
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