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![]() "Meindert Sprang" wrote in message ... "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... So even an engineer might understand. . . http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu.../leadacid.html Engineers look at a battery as a physical object while an electrician looks at it as a container for a chemical reactions that store and release electricity. Higher voltage than a fully charge battery can supply, when applied to the battery terminals drives the chemical reaction and changes it from releasing electrons to storing electrons but does not reverse the current as most dumb engineers claim. Read the above link carefully and click on all the links and perhaps you will understand the error of your thinking. Well, I did. Lucky for me, I studied chemisty as well. And what do I see in the second picture? The decomposition of lead and sulphuric acid on the left produces, whait a minute... electrons!! And wait, what do I see? On the right side, these electrons are used to combine lead oxide and sulphuric acid into leadsulphate and water. Sooooo, I see electrons flowing THROUGH the innards of the battery. Care to argue with that? Easy to argue with that. Electrons only "flow" in a conductor. A chemical reaction is NOT a conductor. Electrons don't flow in a chemical reaction. A chemical reaction is a chemical reaction. These particular chemical reactions just happen to change the metal composition in such a way as to change back and forth metals that store or release electrons up the plates and out the top and not along a circuit through the electrolyte. There is no "flow" in the traditional sense of the word between the positive and negative plates. No circuit. Where there is no circuit there is no flow. CN |
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