In a battery, the chemical reaction supplies excess electrons.
A battery contains a charge of electrons. When these electrons leave the battery and travel through a circuit that is described as current.
No. Electrons are not consumed in a battery. For every electron that goes in one end of a battery, the battery pushes another electron out the other end.
In general, cable electrons don't get along with battery electrons... electrons are electrons; it doesn't matter if they're in a cable, or a battery, they are the same. Batteries are always DC, but the electricity flowing through a cable does not necessarily have to be - it can be AC.
when a battery is charged the electrons are received by the acidic compound in the battery. then it is stored in battery. then released to anything you wanted. "if you think this won't work buy a new battery instead of asking such question in web"
Electrons flow through wires that are hooked to a battery. The battery's negative terminal repels the electrons, while the positive terminal attracts them.
the battery will no longer work.
There are protons, neutrons, and electrons inside everything that you can touch. If you provide a path for them outside the battery, electrons will flow from the battery's negative terminal to the positive one, and supply some energy on the way that you can use to run things or heat things with.
zinc
The action of a battery
When you start at the negative end of the battery, you start to lose electrons and the circuit is closed.
In a battery, or voltaic pile, the negative terminal or wire, called the anode, emits electrons in an electrical circuit. The other terminal, called the cathode, collects electrons in an electrical circuit.