(isim) elektrot

listen to the pronunciation of (isim) elektrot
التركية - الإنجليزية
electrode
the terminal through which electric current passes between metallic and nonmetallic parts of an electric circuit
any terminal that conducts an electric current into or away from various conducting substances in a circuit (such as the anode or cathode of a battery)
A conductor (not necessarily metallic) used to establish electrical contact with a non-metallic portion of a circuit Electrodes would be an integral part of ultra-high-power (UHP) transformers in a steel plant (Source: Mintzer, 1992)
A CONDUCTOR used to establish electrical contact with a nonmetallic part of a circuit
A conductor by which electrical current enters or leaves a non-metallic medium, such as the electrolyte in a battery (as well as vacuum tubes and lots of other devices)
A conductor through which current enters or leaves an electrolytic cell, at which there is a charge from conduction by electrons to conduction by charged particles of matter, or vice versa
The terminal in electric apparatus that conducts electricity in or out
Electrical terminal that conducts an electric current into or out of a fuel cell
An electrode is a small piece of metal or other substance that is used to take an electric current to or from a source of power, a piece of equipment, or a living body. The patient's brain activity is monitored via electrodes taped to the skull. a small piece of metal or a wire that is used to send electricity through a system or through a person's body (electro- + hodos ). Electric conductor, usually metal, used as one of two terminals to conduct electric current through a conducting medium. A simple voltaic cell, or battery, consists of two electrodes, usually one zinc and one copper, immersed in an electrolytic solution (see electrolyte). When a chemical reaction occurs in the solution, electrons gather on the zinc electrode, or cathode, which becomes negatively charged. At the same time, electrons are drawn from the copper electrode, the anode, giving it a positive charge. The difference in charge sets up a potential difference, or voltage, between the two electrodes. When they are connected by a conducting wire, electrons flow from the cathode to the anode, producing a current
The device through which current is conducted thru to the arc or base metal during the process of welding
An electrical conductor through which an electric current enters or leaves a conducting medium, whether it be an electrolytic solution, solid, molten mass, gas, or vacuum For electrolytic solutions, many solids, and molten masses, an electrode is an electrical conductor at the surface of which a change occurs from conduction by electrons to conduction by ions For gases and vacuum, the electrodes merely serve to conduct electricity to and from the medium
a Metal-Arc Filler metal in the form of a wire or rod, whether bare or covered, through which current is conducted between the electrode holder and the arc
the terminal at which electricity passes from one medium into another, such as in an electrical cell where the current leaves or returns to the electrolyte
a conductor used to make electrical contact with some part of a circuit
Conductor by which electric current enters or leaves an electrolyte in electrolysis
A conductor through which a current enters or leaves an electrolytic cell, vacuum tube, or any nonmetallic conductor
The path by which electricity is conveyed into or from a solution or other conducting medium; esp
a conductor used to make contact with a non-conducting part of a circuit
a collector or emitter of electric charge in a semiconducting device
(isim) elektrot
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