A Brief Battery History
Battery development dates as far back as the late 18th century. The cause was
championed by the work carried out by Luigi Galvani from 1780 to 1786.
Through his experiments Galvani observed that, when connected pieces of iron
and brass were applied to frog’s legs, they caused them to twitch.
However, Galvani thought that the effect originated in the leg tissue.
Nevertheless, Galvani had laid the cornerstone for further developments in "voltaic" electricity.
From 1796 - 1799, Alessandro Volta experimented with zinc and silver plates to
produce electric currents at the Pavia University.
Volta stacked the two to form a "pile", the first "dry" battery.
By 1800 Volta had created the "crown of cups", a modified arrangement of zinc
and silver discs dipped in a salt solution.
In the years that ensued, other means of producing electricity were invented,
all of which involved the use of liquid electrodes.
Those developed by Bunsen (1842) and Grove (1839) were amongst the most successful
systems, and, were used for many years.
By 1866, Georges Leclanche, a French engineer, patented a new system, which was
immediately successful. In the space of two years, twenty thousand of his cells
were being used in the telegraph system. Leclanche's original cell was assembled
in a porous pot. The positive electrode consisted of crushed manganese dioxide with
a little carbon mixed in. The negative pole was a zinc rod. The cathode was packed
into the pot, and a carbon rod was inserted to act as a currency collector. The
anode or zinc rod and the pot were then immersed in an ammonium chloride solution.
The liquid acted as the electrolyte, readily seeping through the porous cup and making
contact with the cathode material. Leclanche's "wet"cell (as it was popularly referred to)
became the forerunner to the world's first widely used battery, the zinc carbon cell.
Leclanche's invention, which was quite heavy and prone to breakage, was steadily improved
over the years. The idea of encapsulating both the negative electrode and porous pot
into a zinc cup was first patented by J.A. Thiebaut in 1881. But, it was Carl Gassner
of Mainz who is credited as constructing the first commercially successful "dry" cell.
Variations followed. By 1889 there were at least six well-known dry batteries in
circulation. Later battery manufacturing produced smaller, lighter batteries, and the
application of the tungsten filament in 1909 created the impetus to develop batteries
for use in torches.
The production of batteries was greatly increased during the First World War as a
means of powering torches, field radios. Other milestones in battery production
include widespread radio broadcasting, which brought battery-operated wireless
into the heart of many homes. But, it was during the inter-war years that battery
performance was greatly enhanced. This was achieved through better selection of
materials and methods of manufacture.
Batteries have now become an essential part of everyday life. They are the power
source for millions of consumer, business, medical, military and industrial appliances
worldwide. This demand is steadily growing.
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Alessandro Volta Invented the first 'dry' battery.
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