different between electrode vs electrolyte
electrode
English
Etymology
Coined by British scientist Michael Faraday in 1833, first used in his Diary (laboratory notebook) from the Ancient Greek words ???????? (?lektron, “amber”) (from which the word electricity is derived) and ???? (hodós, “way”).
Pronunciation
- (UK) IPA(key): /??l?k.t???d/, /i?l?k.t???d/
Noun
electrode (plural electrodes)
- the terminal through which electric current passes between metallic and nonmetallic parts of an electric circuit
- a collector or emitter of electric charge in a semiconducting device
Related terms
Translations
See also
- -ode
- cathode
- anode
Anagrams
- electroed
electrode From the web:
- what electrode to use
- what electrode to use for stainless steel
- what electrode is used as a ground reference
- what electrode to use for steel
- what electrodes are low hydrogen
- what electrode is used for welding aluminum
- what electrode for tig welding aluminum
- what electrode to use for tig welding aluminum
electrolyte
English
Etymology
From electro- +? -lyte, from electrolysis. Coined by English scientist Michael Faraday in 1834.
Pronunciation
- (General American) IPA(key): /??l?k.t???la?t/
Noun
electrolyte (plural electrolytes)
- (chemistry) A substance that, in solution or when molten, ionizes and conducts electricity.
- (physiology) Any of the various ions (such as sodium or chloride) that regulate the electric charge on cells and the flow of water across their membranes.
Related terms
- electrolytic
Translations
electrolyte From the web:
- what electrolytes
- what electrolytes are in gatorade
- what electrolytes are lost in diarrhea
- what electrolyte imbalance causes seizures
- what electrolytes do
- what electrolyte causes depolarization
- what electrolytes are in pedialyte
- what electrolytes are lost in sweat
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