Why do batteries produce electricity?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Chemical reactions move electrons
They store static charge — Wrong. Batteries don't store static electricity. They store chemical energy that gets converted to electrical energy through controlled chemical reactions. Static charge would discharge instantly, not provide steady current.
Chemical reactions move electrons ✓ — Correct! Batteries have two electrodes (anode and cathode) in an electrolyte. Chemical reactions at the anode release electrons, while reactions at the cathode accept them. This creates electron flow (electricity) through the external circuit. For example, zinc atoms lose electrons at one end while manganese dioxide gains them at the other. Chemistry powers your devices!
Metals generate current — Wrong. Metals alone don't generate electricity. You need specific metals in a chemical system where one metal oxidizes (loses electrons) and the other reduces (gains electrons). It's the chemical reaction, not just the presence of metal, that creates current.
More Chemistry Around Us questions
- Why can IFRA restrict a natural essential oil ingredient, not just synthetics?
- Some long-wear perfumes keep citrus noticeable for hours. What breaks the old pyramid?
- Why can one perfume smell different on warm skin than on a paper strip?
- A fixative can make perfume last without being the loudest smell. What is it doing?
- Spraying perfume on a warm wrist can smell bigger but fade faster. Why?
- Why do citrus openings fade before woody notes in many perfumes?
