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A cell aka battery.
Neither, it is chemical! Static and current electricity are examples of it.
Chemical (battery), electrical (current), thermal (filament), and radiant (light).
D. Electrical energy.
An electrical insulator.
cell
A storage battery falls into that category. A load has to be applied to the battery before an electrical current will flow.
chemical energy
A battery uses a chemical action to produce direct current electrical energy.
An ampere is the unit of (electrical) current.
A battery stores chemical energy creating a voltage or potential difference that is the potential to do work.When a battery is connected to an electrical device, current flow and is so the conversion of chemical energy into electrical energy.
chemical energy
battery
Batteries have chemical energy stored inside them. Of course, when they provide a current, this chemical energy is transformed (in part) into electrical energy.
electrolytic decomposition reaction.
The passage of an electric current through a conducting liquid causes chemical reactions.The resulting effects are called chemical effects of electric current
Water can be broken down by the chemical process called electrolysis. An electrical current is passed through water with an electrolyte added to it. The electrical current breaks down the water into hydrogen and oxygen gas that bubble up from the electrodes in the water.