ChatterBank2 mins ago
When A Battery Is Charged, Or Loses Its Charge, Would Its Weight Change
?
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No best answer has yet been selected by sandyRoe. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think this is O level standard Jim when the answer is no
the charges just shift up and down
I wondered about Lead Acid as I couldnt remember the equations
and found this on wiki
"Overcharging with high charging voltages generates oxygen and hydrogen gas by electrolysis of water, which is lost to the cell."
so yeah in a lead acid system if you overcharge it - not really O levelly
Lithium oxygen - invented after I graduated - interacts with the environment and so the answer appears yes
but that isnt kinda o levelly either
I mean you can use any two dissimilar metals Mg-Cu etc
and nothing much happens
The stack has a bit about a kilogram of electrons
or mole
and I tried that at A level in 1968
and my chemistry master went off his trolley
I didnt make it in science
the charges just shift up and down
I wondered about Lead Acid as I couldnt remember the equations
and found this on wiki
"Overcharging with high charging voltages generates oxygen and hydrogen gas by electrolysis of water, which is lost to the cell."
so yeah in a lead acid system if you overcharge it - not really O levelly
Lithium oxygen - invented after I graduated - interacts with the environment and so the answer appears yes
but that isnt kinda o levelly either
I mean you can use any two dissimilar metals Mg-Cu etc
and nothing much happens
The stack has a bit about a kilogram of electrons
or mole
and I tried that at A level in 1968
and my chemistry master went off his trolley
I didnt make it in science
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