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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 5 page paper looks at the life and work of the British scientist John Frederic Daniell (1790 – 1845), tracing his life from birth to death and explaining his notable and important achievements including his work on batteries and the development of the Daniell Cell Battery. The bibliography cites 2 sources.
Page Count:
5 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS14_TEdaniell.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a great deal to the physical sciences of the time, his developments were aid by good observation and deduction skills as well as a talent for classifying finding in a
logical manner. Daniell was born on the 12th of March 1790 in London (Debus, 1968). As the son of a
lawyer he was in a good position to gain a sound education but then went to work in industry, working in a refinery where he put his skills to good
use making improvements to the Processes and also the technological side of the operations (Debus, 1968). He also attended some lectures that
were given William Thomas Brande in 1812 at the medical school located in Windmill Street London, Brande was a Professor of Chemistry at the Royal Institute, and may be seen
as influential in Daniell being elected to become a fellow with the Royal Institute in 1814 (Debus, 1968). Other support came from a physician by the name of George
Pearson as well as Samuel Lysons who was the vice president of the Royal Society and an antiquary. His election was not only due to contacts, but also dui to
the reputation he had already been establishing for himself. Daniell had been conducting metrological experiments in a laboratory had set up inside
his fathers house at Lincoln fields, between the years of 1812 and 1817 he also undertook to tour the British Isles with his supporter Brande, this geographic tour provided Daniell
a good collection of geological specimens (Debus, 1968). In 1815 he was also key in the launch of the Journal of the Royal Institution, again with Brande, and in 1820
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