I have seen citrius powered LCD clocks so I presume it will produce at least 0.5v per lemon . I have also seen batteries made using citric acid and charcoal producing 1 volt or more . If you wire the lemons in SERIES you will produce whatever voltage times 4 . Wired in PARELLEL you with maintain the same voltage but increase your current capasacity by 4
it doesnt a lime produce's more voltage than a lemon
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It doesn't, a lemon has more voltage than an apple because a lemon has a higher amount of acidity. The more acidity a fruit has, the more voltage it has. [NEEDS CORRECTION] (Acidity in foods does NOT correlate to the amount of voltage produced. See University of Illinois, Physics Department {Q & A: Fruit Batteries | Department of Physics | University of Illinois}.)
A Lemon because more acid btw hii !:) Amanda cristian isaih
Neither. The voltage depends on the relative electronegativities of the materials in the electrodes, not the electrolyte between the electrodes.
Citrus fruits . . . the lemon is the best for creating voltage.
Yes because the acidity level determines the PH level which when steel and copper are hooked into the lemon and hooked onto a battery it will start to charge.
Lemon batteries can generate electricity by using the acid in the lemon as an electrolyte and the metal in the electrodes as conductors. When the electrodes are inserted into the lemon, a chemical reaction occurs that creates a flow of electrons, generating a small amount of electricity. Multiple lemon batteries can be connected in series to increase the voltage and power output.
Higher acid / lower pH in limes
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One possible question is "How does the voltage of the battery change if different combinations of metals are tried for the two electrodes?".
Some disadvantages of a lemon cell include low voltage output, limited power capacity, short shelf life due to the perishable nature of lemons, and susceptibility to variations in the lemon's acidity which can affect the cell's performance.