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  2. Alessandro Volta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alessandro_Volta

    Alessandro Giuseppe Antonio Anastasio Volta (UK: / ˈ v ɒ l t ə /, US: / ˈ v oʊ l t ə /; Italian: [alesˈsandro ˈvɔlta]; 18 February 1745 – 5 March 1827) was an Italian chemist and physicist who was a pioneer of electricity and power, [1] [2] [3] and is credited as the inventor of the electric battery and the discoverer of methane.

  3. Sakizō Yai - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sakizō_Yai

    In 1885, at the age of 21, Yai invented a continuous electric clock powered by wet-cell batteries. Electrically-powered clocks already existed, but they had conventional spring-powered clockwork movements , with electricity used to wind up the spring, while Yai's was a breakthrough, powered directly by a battery he had made. [ 2 ]

  4. Voltaic pile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voltaic_pile

    Alessandro Volta's theory of contact tension considered that the emf, which drives the electric current through a circuit containing a voltaic cell, occurs at the contact between the two metals. Volta did not consider the electrolyte, which was typically brine in his experiments, to be significant.

  5. William Robert Grove - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Robert_Grove

    In 1842, Grove developed the first fuel cell (which he called the gas voltaic battery), which produced electrical energy by combining hydrogen and oxygen, and described it using his correlation theory. [3] In developing the cell and showing that steam could be disassociated into oxygen and hydrogen, and the process reversed, he was the first ...

  6. John Horton Conway - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Horton_Conway

    Conway further developed tangle theory and invented a system of notation for tabulating knots, now known as Conway notation, while correcting a number of errors in the 19th-century knot tables and extending them to include all but four of the non-alternating primes with 11 crossings. [35]

  7. Stanford R. Ovshinsky - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stanford_R._Ovshinsky

    Ovshinsky was born and grew up in the industrial town of Akron, Ohio, then at the center of the American rubber industry.The elder son of working-class Lithuanian Jewish immigrant parents who left Eastern Europe around 1905—Benjamin Ovshinsky from Lithuania and Bertha Munitz from what is now Belarus—Ovshinsky became active in social activities at an early age during the Great Depression. [7]

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  9. Daniell cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daniell_cell

    The Daniell cell was a great improvement over the existing technology used in the early days of battery development. A later variant of the Daniell cell called the gravity cell or crowfoot cell was invented in the 1860s by a Frenchman named Callaud and became a popular choice for electrical telegraphy.