Theoretically, a battery consists of two or more cells, but in practice most people call a single cell a battery.
A cell is a physical unit that produces a specific voltage, for NiCd it is ~1.2 volts, for lead acid, it is ~2.1 volts.
A battery can be made of a single cell, or multiple cells. In the case of a 9 volt battery, there are typically 6 cells in series to produce the 9 volts (1.5 volts x 6).
AnswerA cell is a single source of electricity produced by a chemical action in the cell. A battery is simply a combination of cells connected electrically.
Fuel cells and batteries are similar because they use a chemical reaction to provide electricity. A battery stores the chemical reactants, usually metal compounds like lithium, zinc or manganese. Once used up, you must recharge or throw away the battery. A fuel cell actually creates electricity through reactants (hydrogen and oxygen) stored externally. The fuel cell will produce electricity as long as it has a fuel supply. In short, a fuel cell vehicle is refueled instead of recharged.
A battrey cell charges the electric things like torch,electric toy etc.
a battery is a chemical reaction and a capacitory stores electrons. It's kinda like the difference between a regular battery and a rechargeable battery.
A cell has a single unit that is at the base voltage. A batter can have either a single cell or multiple cells which are connected together in a series or parallel that can make a current.
A battery that produces electricity
Lead acid, wet cell.
Yes, 3.7V and 3.6V are the volts of lithium battery cells, and one is Li-ion battery cell and the other is lithium polymer battery cell. Both of them can be called as lithium batteries
A cell
They weren't, they were single-use. Pick the two correct metals, stick them close together in an acidic bath, and they'll deliver a voltage and a current until one of the metals is all used up. No charging required.
another name for a battery is a cell a cell is one battery and a battery is a two or more cells or batteries
wet cell battery
No, an automobile battery is a wet cell battery not a dry cell battery.
A dry cell battery is full of solid or paste-like electrolytes. One example of a dry cell is anode, which is a zinc metal. A wet cell battery is full of liquid electrolytes. One example of a liquid cell is an old car battery.
if it is any think over 1 volt it is not a cell battery it is just a 6 volt battery if you had a 1 volt then it would be a cell battery
The connections on a dry cell auto battery are totally different than a regular wet cell battery.
No, a lead acid battery is a wet cell battery and a 9 volt alkaline battery is a dry cell battery.
the cell is the battery.
The 6 cell battery lasts about 2 to 4 hours, the 6 cell is a little smaller and a little cheaper. The 9 cell battery is a little larger, costs a little more, and lasts a little longer.
Dead cell in the battery or something is on pulling power from the battery. If it is a dead cell the battery must be replaced.
A fuel cell is different from a battery cell in so far as reactants are constantly supplied to a fuel cell making it an open system whereas a battery cell is a closed system that stores the reactants within it. A fuel cell works as long as fuel is supplied to it whereas a battery cell requires regular replacements.
How long does a Battery 6 Cell battery last