
| Recharge a Battery Challenge Glossary |
Force - Just like magnets, electric charges can repel or
attract each other. Because opposites attract, there is a force between
the negatively charged electrons and the positively charged proton.
Positive Electrodes - Made
of lead dioxide (PbO2).
Negative Electrodes - Made
of so called 'spongy' lead (Pb). In addition, carbon and barium sulphate
are often incorporated into the negative plates to improve performance at
low temperatures.
Electrolyte - A liquid that conducts electricity due to the movement of ions. In
a lead-acid battery, the electrolyte is composed of distilled water and sulphuric
acid.
Discharged - If the battery is left totally discharged for long
periods too much lead sulphate is formed which crystalizes and permanently
damages the battery. Lead acid batteries can also be damaged by excessive
charging. This can lead to gassing, whereby the water molecules in the
battery are split into hydrogen and oxygen a potentially explosive
mixture. In addition, water can be lost by simple evaporation.
Electrical current - Try to imagine the electrical current
flowing in a wire as cars driving along a road, where the road is the wire
and the cars are the electrons. The current would be the number of cars
passing a given point.
Backwards - negative to positive.
Voltage - If you think of the electric current as
cars driving along a road, the voltage is the speed at which the cars are
moving.
13.2v - Despite holding up to 13.2v, as a
general rule car batteries are called 12v batteries.
Kinetic Energy - The energy of movement. For example,
a turning handle has kinetic energy.
Induction was discovered by Michael Faraday in
1831. Other methods of induction include rotating a magnet within a coil
of wire and rotating a coil of wire within a magnetic field.
Armature - A solid iron core.
Direct Current - The current we take to the battery needs
to move in one direction.
Alternating Current - When an armature turns it generates
current first in one direction then the other. This is because when a coil
turns in a clockwise direction inside a magnetic field, the first 180
degrees of the turn may result in a current going in a positive direction
but the second 180 degrees would result in the induced current going in a
negative direction. As electricity needs to be forced in one direction
'backwards' into a battery to recharge it, this constant change of
direction would be no good.
A rectifier works as an electrical one-way
valve.
A commutator is a simple switching connection that
ensures that current only flows in one direction.
Sliding Connection - Using brushes to harvest the
electrical current we allowed the coil to turn without twisting the wires
that lead to the battery. Normally, brushes would be made of
graphite.
Shunt Circuit - This is a fine coil of wire one end
connected to the positive terminal of the generator and the other connected to
the negative terminal.
Solenoid - An electromagnetic switch. The beauty
of this switch is that as soon as the voltage drops, the circuit to the
battery becomes disconnected thus preventing the current from flowing
backwards.
Gear - This allowed many rotations of the generator
from one turn of the big wheel.
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