First, roll all of the lemons, one at
a time. Press down with your hand and roll until you
feel the lemon become sort of “squishy.” The
purpose of this is to release the juice inside the
lemon. This step is very important; it helps you get
the maximum response from your lemons.
Push
and then twist a zinc-plated screw into one of the
lemons about 1/3 of the way from one end. With the
knife, carefully cut a 1 cm (3/4 in) slit into the
lemon about 1/3 of the way from the other end.
It
might be better for an adult to handle the knife.
In all cases, please work with the knife SLOWLY and
CAREFULLY.
Insert a copper coin into the slit so that about half
of the coin is inside the lemon.
Note: Make sure you use a shiny new coin for this.
If it is old and dull, polish it with steel wool.
Believe it or not, you can now get electricity from
the lemon!! It behaves like an electric cell, with
the coin as the positive (+) terminal and the screw
as the negative (-) terminal. Unfortunately, it is
a very weak cell. But if you have a couple more, you
can join them to make a lemon battery.
Add coins and screws to the other two lemons the same way you did with the
first. Then, with the wires and clips, join the three lemon cells together,
so that the screw of the first lemon is connected to the coin of the second
lemon, and so on. Add wires and clips to the first coin and the last screw
also.
Finally,
label the clip from the first coin with a “+” and
the clip from the last screw with a “- “.
Like a real battery, your lemon battery has a positive
(+) terminal and a negative (-) terminal.
When connected like this in what is called a series
connection, the lemons work together to create about
the same voltage, or electrical force, as a couple
of small flashlight batteries, somewhere between 2.5
and 3 volts. But this lemon battery does not create
enough electrical current to light a flashlight bulb.
How can we tell if we really have created a battery?
One way is to connect it to an electronic device that
needs no more than about 2.5 to 3 volts but that does
not require much electrical current. One such device
called a light emitting diode, or LED for short. A
low voltage and small current can cause an LED to light
up.
The specifications on our LED package are: 5mm Red
LED, 1.8 volt, 20mA. This means the diameter of the
LED is 5 mm, and that it requires 1.8 volts and 20
milliamps of current to light up. Actually, the LED
will light up dimly with less than 20 milliamps. Our
lemon battery has enough volts but not nearly enough
milliamps. So we will have to find a way to see its
dim light. We tried enclosing it in a film canister
to shield it from outside light. |