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BATTERY HISTORY
   
 

Timeline of Battery History

   
 
1748   Benjamin Franklin first coined the term "battery" to describe an array of charged glass plates.
     
1780 to 1786   Luigi Galvani demonstrated what we now understand to be the electrical basis of nerve impulses and provided the cornerstone of research for later inventors like Volta .
     
1800   Alessandro Volta invented the voltaic pile and discovered the first practical method of generating electricity. Constructed of alternating discs of zinc and copper with pieces of cardboard soaked in brine between the metals, the voltic pile produced electrical current. The metallic conducting arc was used to carry the electricity over a greater distance. Alessandro Volta's voltaic pile was the first "wet cell battery" that produced a reliable, steady current of electricity.
     
1836   Englishman, John F. Daniel invented the Daniel Cell that used two electrolytes: copper sulfate and zinc sulfate. The Daniel Cell was somewhat safer and less corrosive then the Volta cell. 
     
1839   William Robert Grove developed the first fuel cell, which produced electrical by combining hydrogen and oxygen.
     
1839 to 1842   Inventors created improvements to batteries that used liquid electrodes to produce electricity. Bunsen (1842) and Grove (1839) invented the most successful.
     
1859   French inventor, Gaston Plante developed the first practical storage lead-acid battery that could be recharged (secondary battery). This type of battery is primarily used in cars today.
     
1866   French engineer, Georges Leclanche patented the carbon-zinc wet cell battery called the Leclanche cell. According to The History of Batteries: "George 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. The liquid acted as the electrolyte, readily seeping through the porous cup and making contact with the cathode material."
     
1868   Twenty thousand of Georges Leclanche's cells were now being used with telegraph equipment.
     
1881   J.A. Thiebaut patented the first battery with both the negative electrode and porous pot placed in a zinc cup.
     
1881   Carl Gassner invented the first commercially successful dry cell battery (zinc-carbon cell).
     
1899   Waldmar Jungner invented the first nickel-cadmium rechargeable battery.
     
1901   Thomas Alva Edison invented the alkaline storage battery .
     
1949   Lew Urry invented the small alkaline battery.
     
1954   Gerald Pearson, Calvin Fuller and Daryl Chapin invented the first solar battery.