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- Cola Can Battery
- How to Make a Lemon Battery
- Splitting Water!
- Electricity & Magnetism: How Resistance Produces Heat
- Volts and Amps: Understanding Current Flow
- Make Your Own Telegraph
- Egg Experiment
- Pressure Experiment
- Fresh Water Experiment
- No Gravity Water Experiment
- Density Experiment
- Capillary Action Experiment
- How to Build a Parachute
- Magic Coin Heat Experiment
- Alkaline Battery
- Nickel Cadmium Battery
- Nickel Metal Hydride Battery
- Lithium Ion Battery
- How to Build a Flashlight
- How to Build a Magnetic Compass
Cola Can Battery
Step 1: Gather Your Materials Materials: A can of cola A copper coin Tools: Can opener Crocodile clips Wire wool Step 2: Open your can of cola and pour the contents into a cup, put it to one side we’ll … Continue reading
Posted in Informational, Science Project
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How to Make a Lemon Battery
Lemon Battery When your kiddo comes home with news that it is science fair time at school a quick, easy, and educational option is the lemon battery. Make a Lemon Battery What You’ll Need: 4 lemons 4 galvanized nails 4 … Continue reading
Splitting Water!
Electricity is “created” when certain chemicals react together. We use chemically- made electricity to power many machines from flashlights to a watch or sometimes a car. Yes, there are cars that run on electricity! The devices that store electricity are … Continue reading
Alkaline Battery
A disposable, rechargeable battery with a high energy density that has storage longevity. Mostly used in consumer electronics such as remote controls, flashlights, etc. In an alkaline battery, the anode (negative terminal) is made of zinc powder and the cathode … Continue reading
Nickel Cadmium Battery
NiCd is a type of rechargeable battery that uses nickel oxide hydroxide and cadmium as electrodes. Widely used in applications such as power tools, they have a high discharge rate but have low capacity compared to other rechargeable batteries. There … Continue reading
Lithium Ion Battery
A very light, rechargeable battery commonly used in notebook computers, cell phones and camcorders. As one of the newer batteries out today, this battery can give 40% more capacity than a comparable sized NiCd battery. This battery is a rechargeable … Continue reading
Posted in Informational
Tagged battery, camcorder, capacity, cell phone, electrode, lithium ion, negative, NiCd, no memory effect, notebook computer, portable electronics, positive, rechargeable battery
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How Batteries Work
Batteries are all over the place — in our cars, our PCs, laptops, portable MP3 players and cell phones. A battery is essentially a can full of chemicals that produce electrons. Chemical reactions that produce electrons are called electrochemical reactions. … Continue reading
Posted in Informational
Tagged AA, batteries, battery, C, cars, cell, cell phones, chemical reactions, D, electrochemical reactions, electronic circuit, electrons, flashlight batteries, internal resistance, laptops, light bulb, load, negative, PCs, portable MP3 players, positive, terminals, voltaic pile
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Battery History
In the 1800s, before the invention of the electrical generator (the generator was not invented and perfected until the 1870s), the Daniell cell was extremely common for operating telegraphs and doorbells. The Daniell cell is also known by three other … Continue reading
Posted in Informational
Tagged battery, Crowfoot cell, Daniell Cell, doorbells, electrical generator, Gravity cell, history, telegraphs, Wet cell
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