why current doesn’t flow when two batteries are connected positive to negative

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Why doesn’t current flow when I connect the positive pole of one battery to the negative pole of another? In the moment of contact, shouldn’t the electrons that are abundant in the negative pole want to rush to the positively charged pole of the other battery until the charge in both poles equalizes?

My mental model of a battery is a water tank that has a wall through the middle, giving it two partitions. One of them is full of water, the other empty. Now you can connect a hose from one end to the other and water will flow from full to empty until the water level equalizes. But if you connected the empty side of one tank to the full side of another tank, water would still flow. Clearly my model is flawed. Can someone explain? Thank you!

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6 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

The battery is a pump. It just pushes the electricity. But when the “door” is closed, it’s just pushing against nothing and everything just stops. Putting two pumps one behind the other won’t make the water move if the door is still shut at the other end.

The way to “open” the door is to make a circuit… then the pump has somewhere to push the electricity, and the electricity has somewhere to go, and as it brushes past things in the circuit it does “work” (like light a lightbulb, or power a motor, or whatever).

If you imagine a wire as a set of ball-bearings in a tube, and air as an obstruction, then a circuit is a complete loop of ball bearings where the last eventually pushes on the first. When the circuit isn’t complete, you’re just pushing ball-bearings but they have nowhere to go. It’s like pushing them against a closed door (the air, which has a high resistance).

Only when you complete the circuit can the ENTIRE loop of ball-bearings move and it moves against itself… as one ball leaves the battery, another comes in behind, which means the whole loop is able to move around. And it’s that movement that is “electrical power”, that does useful work.

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