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  1. A Voltaic Cell (also known as a Galvanic Cell) is an electrochemical cell that uses spontaneous redox reactions to generate electricity. It consists of two separate half-cells . A half-cell is composed of an electrode (a strip of metal, M) within a solution containing M n+ ions in which M is any arbitrary metal.

  2. Galvanic Cell or Voltaic Cell - A Galvanic cell, also known as the Voltaic cell is a device in which electrical current is generated by a spontaneous redox reaction. A galvanic cell has two half cells.

  3. A galvanic cell or voltaic cell, named after the scientists Luigi Galvani and Alessandro Volta, respectively, is an electrochemical cell in which an electric current is generated from spontaneous oxidation–reduction reactions.

  4. This type of electrochemical cell is often called a voltaic cell after its inventor, the Italian physicist Alessandro Volta (1745–1827). In contrast, an electrolytic cell consumes electrical energy from an external source, using it to cause a nonspontaneous redox reaction to occur (ΔG> 0).

  5. A galvanic cell uses the energy released from a spontaneous redox reaction to produce an electric current. Another common name for galvanic cells is voltaic cells, which is named after another Italian physicist, Alessandro Volta (1745 – 1827), who invented the galvanic (voltaic) cell.

  6. A voltaic cell is an electrochemical cell that uses a spontaneous redox reaction to produce electrical energy. The structure of a voltaic cell includes two half-cells; each being one part of a voltaic cell in which either the oxidation or reduction half-reaction takes place, and each containing an electrode.

  7. Galvanic cells, also known as voltaic cells, are electrochemical cells in which spontaneous oxidation-reduction reactions produce electrical energy.

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