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Did you know you can make electricity without
a battery or a generator? You can make a small
amount of electricity with a lemon. To make
a lemon battery and feel the electric "juice"
flow, just follow the instructions below.

What to do
- Have your older friend or an adult strip
2 inches of insulation off the copper wire.
Clip the 2 inches of bare wire with the
clippers.
- Straighten out the paper clip and cut
about 2 inches of the straightened steel
wire, or use a 2-inch piece or strip of
zinc.
- Use sandpaper to smooth any rough spots
on the ends of the wire and paper clip or
piece of zinc.
-
Squeeze the lemon gently with your hands.
But don't rupture the lemon's skin. Rolling
it on a table with a little pressure works
great.
- Push the pieces of the paper clip and
the wire into the lemon so they are as close
together as you can get them without touching.
- Moisten your tongue with saliva. Touch
the tip of your wet tongue to the free ends
of the two wires.

What you'll discover
The lemon battery is called a voltaic battery,
which changes chemical energy into electrical
energy.
The battery is made up of two different metals
(the steel paper clip and the copper wire).
These are called electrodes, which are the parts
of a battery where electric current enters or
leaves the battery. The electrodes are placed
in a liquid containing an electrolyte, which
is a solution that can conduct electricity.
In a solution of water and an electrolyte,
like the acid in the lemon, an excess of electrons
collects on one end of the electrodes. At the
same time, electrons are lost from the other
electrode.
Touching
the electrodes to your tongue closes the circuit
and allows an small electric current to flow.
A single lemon produces about 7/10 of a volt
of electricity. If you connected two lemons
together, you can power an inexpensive digital
watch (uses about 1.5 volts). (Use a length
of thin, flexible wire to connect the silver
wire of one lemon to the copper wire of the
other lemon. Then attach thin wires from the
other two wires in the lemons to where a battery's
positive and negative poles connect to power
the watch.)
The tingle felt in your tongue and the metallic
taste is due to the movement of electrons through
the saliva on your tongue.
Video demonstration
Note about Lemon Energy
While we know this experiment works, we've had some students do this project
and then try to use the lemon "battery" to light a small flashlight's light bulb.
Their lemons did not work.
Why? The reason is that the lemons produce only a very small current (about one
milliamp). This is not enough electric current to light the bulb. Even with multiple
lemons, the amount of current flowing through the wire may not enough. Though the
voltage is high enough (1.5 volts with two lemons), the current produced may be
too weak. There are many variables (such as the acidity of the lemon), so it's worth
having a go. Even if an experiment doesn't work every time, it helps us to understand
how things work.
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