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AnswerAccording to WikiPedia (http:/en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rechargeable_battery), the nominal cell voltage of a Lead Acid wet-cell battery is 2.1 volts, this implies there are 6 cells in a 12 volt Lead Acid wet-cell battery.
Cell. Each cell is wired in series with the next one. Lead-acid cells produce 2 volts each, thus for 6 cells we get 12 volts.
A lead-acid 12-volt battery typically consists of six cells. Each cell has a nominal voltage of about 2 volts, so when combined, they produce the standard 12 volts. Each cell contains lead dioxide (positive plate), sponge lead (negative plate), and an electrolyte solution of sulfuric acid and water.
A 24V battery typically consists of 12 cells connected in series, with each cell providing approximately 2 volts. This configuration is common in lead-acid batteries, where the 12 cells combine to produce the nominal 24 volts. Other types of batteries may vary, but the 12-cell arrangement is standard for achieving 24V.
Its called a battery because it is a group of cells. In the case of a conventional lead-acid battery each cell produces about 2 volts. To obtain 12 volts, 6 of these cells must be combined, forming a battery. Sometimes the term battery is a misnomer. In the case of 1.5v alkaline "batteries" they are technically just one cell.
There are no volts in a lemon.Answer:A battery mad with alemon, a copper penny and a zinc clad nailw ill create a voltage of about 0.906 volts. This a function of the metals used not the chaice of the lemon as an acid source.Unfortunately this battery will not produce enough current (flowing electrons) to light a bulb.
A lemon typically produces around 0.5 to 0.9 volts of electricity. This is due to the citric acid acting as an electrolyte that allows for a chemical reaction with the metals used in a lemon battery experiment.
A single lead-acid battery cell typically has a nominal voltage output of about 2 volts. Therefore, a six-cell automotive battery, which is commonly used in vehicles, has a total nominal voltage output of 12 volts (2 volts per cell x 6 cells).
The cells in the stomach lining called parietal cells produce hydrochloric acid (HCl).
None. But it does have acid. If two strips of different metals are inserted into a grapefruit, that makes a battery, which has enough current to run a digital clock. It will produce 1.5 volts.
It depends on what the 6 cells are, but the battery voltage is just 6 times the cell voltage. In a car battery (lead-acid cells) - 12V In a dry-battery (zinc-carbon cells) - 9V
No, the gall bladder does not produce hydrochloric acid the oxyntic cell (chief cells) produce the hydrochloric acid.