voltaic pile - meaning and definition. What is voltaic pile
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What (who) is voltaic pile - definition

FIRST ELECTRICAL BATTERY THAT COULD CONTINUOUSLY PROVIDE AN ELECTRIC CURRENT TO A CIRCUIT
Voltaic Pile; Volta's pile; Voltaic piles; Dry pile; Voltaic Battery; Volta pile; Volta cell; Electric column; Galvanic pile
  • University History Museum of the University of Pavia]].

William Pile (civil servant)         
PILE, SIR WILLIAM DENNIS (1919–1997), CIVIL SERVANT
William Dennis Pile
Sir William Dennis Pile (1 December 1919 – 26 January 1997) was an English civil servant. Educated at St Catharine's College, Cambridge, he served in the Army during the Second World War, reaching the rank of Major.
William A. Pile         
UNION ARMY GENERAL (1829-1889)
William Anderson Pile
William Anderson Pile (February 11, 1829July 7, 1889) was a nineteenth-century politician and minister from Missouri, as well as a general in the Union Army during the American Civil War. He was Governor of New Mexico Territory from 1869 to 1871.
voltaic         
WIKIMEDIA DISAMBIGUATION PAGE
Voltaic (disambiguation)
[v?l'te??k]
¦ adjective relating to electricity produced by chemical action in a primary battery; galvanic.

Wikipedia

Voltaic pile

The voltaic pile was the first electrical battery that could continuously provide an electric current to a circuit. It was invented by Italian chemist Alessandro Volta, who published his experiments in 1799. Its invention can be traced back to an argument between Volta and Luigi Galvani, Volta’s fellow Italian scientist who had gained notoriety for his experiments on frog legs. The voltaic pile then enabled a rapid series of other discoveries including the electrical decomposition (electrolysis) of water into oxygen and hydrogen by William Nicholson and Anthony Carlisle (1800) and the discovery or isolation of the chemical elements sodium (1807), potassium (1807), calcium (1808), boron (1808), barium (1808), strontium (1808), and magnesium (1808) by Humphry Davy.

The entire 19th-century electrical industry was powered by batteries related to Volta's (e.g. the Daniell cell and Grove cell) until the advent of the dynamo (the electrical generator) in the 1870s.

Volta's invention was built on Luigi Galvani's 1780s discovery of how a circuit of two metals and a frog's leg can cause the frog's leg to respond. Volta demonstrated in 1794 that when two metals and brine-soaked cloth or cardboard are arranged in a circuit they produce an electric current. In 1800, Volta stacked several pairs of alternating copper (or silver) and zinc discs (electrodes) separated by cloth or cardboard soaked in brine to increase the total electromotive force. When the top and bottom contacts were connected by a wire, an electric current flowed through the voltaic pile and the connecting wire. The voltaic pile, together with many scientific instruments that belonged to Alessandro Volta, are preserved in the University History Museum of the University of Pavia, where Volta taught from 1778 to 1819.