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The stack of cells is also known as a voltaic pile.
The question is about voltaic pile or a cell.
Such a "set" is called a cell: The voltaic pile in the picture has 6 cells.
Before the voltaic pile was invented, people could only make static electricity.
Battery technology has advanced dramatically since the days of the Voltaic pile.
With the voltaic pile, one can make electricity that keeps flowing for some time.
As the men begin to disperse for the night, one suggests experimenting with a Voltaic pile.
In 1800, Volta invented the first true battery, which came to be known as the voltaic pile.
The voltaic pile was the first battery ever.
Electrically, the machine worked like a voltaic pile, but was constructed completely differently.
For instance, when new kinds of metal were discovered, the electricity from a voltaic pile could "sort" chemicals.
Nowadays, his battery is called the voltaic pile.
Grouped about his feet are a gear-wheel, voltaic pile, telegraph key, and telephone.
He also used the voltaic pile to decompose chemicals and to produce new chemicals.
The voltaic pile replaced the goblets with cardboard soaked in brine.
It hosts a collection of scientific instruments used by the physicist including his early voltaic piles (batteries).
In 1800, He invented the voltaic pile, an early electric battery, which made a steady electric current.
Alessandro Volta invented the first battery, the voltaic pile, in 1800.
Electrochemistry was "invented" at the same time as the voltaic pile; the first kind of electric battery.
Volta's "pile" became known therefore as a voltaic pile.
You can create your own voltaic pile using quarters, foil, blotting paper, cider vinegar and salt.
It was not until the invention of the voltaic pile in the eighteenth century that a viable source of electricity became available.
The voltaic pile was the first electrical battery that could continuously provide an electrical current to a circuit.
The picture to the right shows a voltaic pile: It's a pile, or "stack" of discs, made from 3 different materials.
Ritter made several self-experiments applying the poles of a voltaic pile to his own hands, eyes, ears, nose and tongue.