How do batteries give the electrons their energy?

AI Thread Summary
Batteries generate energy for electrons through chemical reactions that create an electrical potential difference between electrodes. When electrons flow through a circuit, they lose the energy acquired in the battery, which is initially provided by these reactions. The energy is essentially a result of a microscopic force that pushes the electrons, enabling them to do work. This process is not sustainable indefinitely, as the chemical reactions eventually deplete. Understanding this mechanism is crucial for grasping how batteries function.
sodium.dioxid
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When a coulomb (of electron) flows through a resistor, it loses the energy it gained in the battery. How were these electrons fueled in the battery in the first place? I already know that chemical reactions rearrange electrons in the battery. But this doesn't directly address the energy gain (voltage) in the battery.
 
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In a battery, chemical reactions provide for an electrical "potential difference" of the electrodes.
If you are confused, remember that these types of reactions are not perpetually sustainable in a 'closed' system.
They work for a while, then not.
 
Hi sodium.dioxid, welcome to PF

Remember that energy is the capacity to do work and that work is f.d, so fundamentally a battery works by giving a small f over a microscopic d that literally pushes on the electron. That is where the energy comes from, that microscopic push.
 
Sorry guys, I meant to say electric device rather than resistor. Anyway, so they gain chemical energy? But what is that and how do the electrons react to it once they get it.
 
sodium.dioxid said:
Anyway, so they gain chemical energy? But what is that
A microscopic push, as I already mentioned.

sodium.dioxid said:
and how do the electrons react to it once they get it.
They push their neighboring electrons.
 
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