Physics, asked by sahithireddy, 1 year ago

describe  the working of battery

Answers

Answered by shivam2000
1
It gives power/voltage to the circuit for the flow of electrons through all over the circuits. Current only flows when the circuits is complete.

shivam2000: mark my answer best plzzzzzzzz
Answered by kvnmurty
1
A battery is an electrical device that supplies or maintains a constant potential difference in a circuit. The battery converts the chemical energy stored inside it into electrical energy. It is also called an electromotive force. Such a battery is called a DC (direct current) battery - the current flows in one direction only, when the battery is driving the circuit.

A battery has two electrical terminals, one is called positive terminal and the other, the negative terminal. The positive terminal is at a higher potential. The current in the circuit flows from positive terminal towards negative terminal. Electrons move from negative terminal towards the positive. 

Inside the battery, the terminals are attached to metallic plates on which positive or negative ions accumulate. That gives rise to the potential. A battery has a life time. When all the positive charges on the cathode plate move to the anode plate, the battery is discharged. It cannot supply any more voltage.

A battery can be a primary cell or secondary. Primary cells cannot be recharged. The chemical reaction inside the battery cannot be reversed. In secondary cells, the chemical reaction is reversible and so the battery can be recharged thousands of times.

See the diagram for a typical DC circuit with a battery.

Attachments:
Similar questions