Battery Demonstration Unit
- Circa 2000
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Small JPG1200 x 1308px — 74.2 KBLarge JPG2880 x 3138px — 289 KBFull-sized JPG4853 x 5288px — 740 KBOriginal fileTIFF — 4853 x 5288px — 73.4 MBA battery demonstration unit constructed by Alan MacDiarmid (1927-2007), winner of the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for "the discovery and development of conductive polymers." MacDiarmid, Hideki Shirakawa (1936-), and Alan Heeger (1936-) shared the prize for their discovery that plastics could be made to be electrically conductive.
Conductive polymers exhibit the electronic and magnetic properties of metals but retain the mechanical properties of organic polymers. Prototype cells such as this were built to test the electro-conductivity properties of polymers.
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Gift of Alan MacDiarmid. |
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Rights | Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License |
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Cite as
Science History Institute. Battery Demonstration Unit. Photograph, 2023. Science History Institute. Philadelphia. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/1j6523d.
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