A balloon rubbed onto your hair is a good and fun mini-experiment for kids to explore!
when electrical energy is supplied to the motor of an electric fan, some of the electrical energy is transferred to the fan blade as kinetic energy. The energy is also transformed from electrical to kinetic.
electrical, chemical, heat, and light energy
Some examples include using a generator to convert mechanical energy into electrical energy, a solar panel converting sunlight into electrical energy, and a light bulb transforming electrical energy into light and heat energy.
electrical energy, thermal energy, and potential energy
chemical - electrical - light - heat
You hook them up to an electrical circuit, and the energy would appear as electrical energy that the circuit can then transform into some other format.
In a torch, electrical energy from the batteries is converted into light energy and heat energy. The electrical energy powers the light bulb, which emits light energy. Some of the electrical energy is also converted into heat energy due to inefficiencies in the system.
A flashlight transforms electrical energy into light energy and some heat energy. When the battery powers the flashlight, the electrical energy is converted into light energy when the bulb or LED emits light, while some of the energy is also lost as heat.
I wouldn't say that electrical energy "uses" other types of energy; probably you mean that you can convert other types of energy to electrical energy. Most types of energy can be converted to electrical energy, or actually all of them (as long as there is some useful energy left) - including heat energy, nuclear energy, chemical energy, mechanical energy, etc.
That is the electric energy. It is called the electricity
A battery is a chemical source of energy that produces direct current, DC. Some are rechargeable; some are not.
When electrical energy is applied to light bulbs, the energy transformation involves converting electrical energy into light and heat energy. The electrical energy flows through the bulb's filament, heating it up and causing it to emit light. Some of the electrical energy is also converted to heat due to resistance in the filament.