How To Make Your Own Ice Tray Battery

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A battery contains a cathode and an anode. These rest in an electrolyte that both separates them, and allows ions to flow between them. Those three components can be sourced from materials freely available in our homes. Today we illustrate one way to choose the electrolyte, using an ice tray battery as our test bed.

Materials You Need For Your Ice Tray Battery

You will need the following materials for your ice tray test bed:

  • A plus / minus two-foot-long piece of bare copper wire.
  • An ice cube tray with nominally space for 14 ice cubes.
  • 14 non-copper metal screws around one-inch length.
  • Adjust the number per the compartments in your ice tray.
  • Sufficient saltwater to fill the ice tray three quarters full.
  • Similar volumes of bleach, vinegar and lime juice.
  • Two electrical lead wires with alligator clips at both ends.
  • A multi meter or voltage meter on the correct setting.

OBSERVE THIS VIDEO FIRST USING VINEGAR

NOW FOLLOW THIS PROCEDURE WITH SALTWATER

  1. Wind a one-inch piece of copper wire twice around one of the screws.
  2. Bend the remaining length into a hook to clip over an ice tray compartment.
  3. Repeat this process with all but one of the remaining non-copper screws.
  4. Place one screw into each compartment so the wire bridges to the next one.
  5. Note that you have one screw left, and one compartment without a bridge.
  6. Place the spare non-copper metal screw in the empty ice tray comportment.
  7. Place one end of a short length of copper wire in the adjacent compartment.
  8. Fill the ice tray with saltwater until this touches all the screws and the loose wire.

Your ice tray battery test bed is complete. All you need is a device to complete the circuit.

How to Conduct the Experiment

  • Attach one end of one lead wire to the fourteenth screw.
  • Attach one end of the other lead wire to the short length of copper.
  • Connect the other ends of the two lead wires to the meter.
  • The multi meter or voltage meter should read roughly 9 volts.

Now boost the voltage by replacing the saltwater in the ice tray with your choice of bleach, vinegar or lime juice. Observe the voltage reading again. Trial your ice tray battery with the other solutions to determine which electrolyte produces the best batteries. Consider using thicker wire and / or different screws to extend your experiment.

More Information

Build a Battery With a Can of Soda

Light a Candle with a Single Cell Battery

Preview Image: Check Your Ice Tray

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About Author

I tripped over a shrinking bank balance and fell into the writing gig unintentionally. This was after I escaped the corporate world and searched in vain for ways to become rich on the internet by doing nothing. Despite the fact that writing is no recipe for wealth, I rather enjoy it. I will not deny I am obsessed with it when I have the time. I live in Margate on the Kwazulu-Natal south coast of South Africa. I work from home where I ponder on the future of the planet, and what lies beyond in the great hereafter. Sometimes I step out of my computer into the silent riverine forests, and empty golden beaches for which the area is renowned. Richard

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