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  • skulblaka
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    12 years ago

    What stops a battery from just equalizing its own charge internally? By which I mean, why do the electrons have to go all the way around the circuit to get to the negative terminal?

    • Ankaa
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      42 years ago

      High resistance materials between the areas of charge. Nature is inherently lazy, and will take the lower resistance path through the circuit.

    • geoffervescent
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      2 years ago

      Batteries have an insulated separator between the positive and negative sides. They design the battery with a particular maximum voltage in mind, so they engineer it with a separator that is always a higher resistance. Thus the electrons will only be able to make the jump when a circuit with lower resistance is formed.

      • D-ISS-O-CIA-TEDOP
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        22 years ago

        What would happen if that insulating barrier broke? Would the battery explode or just heat up or something?