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| Ev Archive for June 1998 |
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| 895 messages, last added Wed Aug 08 18:42:29 2001 |
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Re: Bioelectronics (Living Batteries)
Does this mean we can replace our battery packs with aquariums?
On Mon, 29 Jun 1998, John Bryan wrote:
> Hello EV people,
> I was recently studying the electronic mechanisms used by creatures
> that use electricity as a defensive strategy, such as some eels and rays.
> I was fascinated to learn that the ones who live in a salt water environment,
> take advantage of the highly conductive medium and wire their batteries in
> parallel for greater current. The ones who live in fresh water need greater
> voltage to overcome the much higher resistence, so wire their batteries in
> series! The batteries in the Electric ray are composed of a large number of
> hexagonal columns holding a pile of plates and filled with a jelled
> electrolyte. The number of plates per column may be 140 to a thousand or
> more. In a large ray it could be up to half a million plates. An average
> Torpedo ray puts out 50 amps at 50-60 volts, but a large one may put out
> 200 volts. I hope other EVers also enjoy this interesting bit of trivia.
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