It comes from the coal, oil, or natural gas that are burned, or the uranium that's
reacted, or the other batteries that are used, or the falling water that flows
through the hydroelectric generator, or the kinetic energy in the wind that turns
the windmill generator, or the solar radiation collected by the photovoltaic cells,
to generate the electric supply that's used to recharge them.
Have I forgotten any ?
Electricity is Energy. But this energy can come from a chemical reaction as in batteries, normal and rechargeable.
Rechargeable batteries come in various standard sizes. For example (AA, AAA, CR123A).
Yes, if the batteries are rechargeable
The popular name for an electrochemical cell is a "battery." Batteries convert stored chemical energy into electrical energy through electrochemical reactions, allowing them to power various devices. They come in various types, such as primary (non-rechargeable) and secondary (rechargeable) batteries.
A flashlight can also get energy from batteries or rechargeable batteries to power the light source.
Duracell offers good quality and easy to use rechargeable batteries. There are generic brands of rechargeable batteries out there but they are often unreliable and wear out very quickly.
Only batteries that are marked "Rechargeable" are rechargeable. Are others are single use.
They claim to be the best of both worlds: rechargeable batteries and disposable batteries. The disposable batteries hold their energy for a long time on the shelf, while rechargeable batteries did not. The eneloop offers the convenience of being recharged, while holding the charge for a long time.
a car battery that can be recharged. All automobile batteries are rechargeable.
The most type of rechargable batteries are Duracell and Energizer. They have some good rechargeable batteries. Energizer just came out with two good new rechargeable batteries.
Yes, Ni-Cd (Nickel-Cadmium) batteries are rechargeable.
Yes, if they are of the rechargeable type