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,
Ge
orges 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.

Alessandro Volta

Biography of Alessandro Volta the inventor of the first practical battery in 
1880.

Alkaline Battery
Lew Urry developed the small alkaline battery in 1949. The inventor was 
working for the Eveready Battery Co. at their research laboratory in Parma, 
Ohio.
Alkaline batteries last five to eight times as long as zinc-carbon cells, 
their predecessors. This was not a patentable invention, since Volta and 
others
long ago created the principles of batteries.

Solar Battery

A solar battery converts the sun's energy to electricity. In 1954, Gerald 
Pearson, Calvin Fuller and Daryl Chapin invented the first solar battery. 
The
inventors created an array of several strips of silicon (each about the size 
of a razorblade), placed them in sunlight, captured the free electrons and
turned them into electrical current.
Bell Laboratories
in New York announced the prototype manufacture of a new solar battery. Bell 
had funded the research. The first public service trial of the Bell Solar 
Battery
began with a telephone carrier system (Americus, Georgia) on October 4 1955.

The
history of photovoltaics
includes the discovery of the solar battery. PV is the technological basis 
for solar power. 

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