释义 |
Planté Electr.|ˈplɑːnteɪ, -æ-| The name of R. L. Gaston Planté (1834–89), French physicist, used attrib. to designate lead-acid accumulator plates formed by a process which he invented, cells containing such plates, and the process itself.
1881Electrician 3 Sept. 249/2 A Planté cell that has been long in use gives a better result than one that has been freshly constructed. 1889G. W. de Tunzelmann Electr. in Mod. Life xiv. 195 The original Planté accumulator has been considerably improved by Faure and others. 1923Glazebrook Dict. Appl. Physics II. 76/2 Owing to its high cost the original Planté process is no longer employed. Ibid. 77/1 Planté negatives are not generally used, as their advantages are not compensated by the additional weight of lead... Planté positives are employed extensively in stationary batteries. 1959Times 11 Sept. 9/2 The field in which the new cell is designed to replace current Planté types is a very wide one. 1964G. Smith Storage Batteries ii. 21 These do not have quite the same long life as the Planté battery. 1970C. L. Mantell Batteries & Energy Systems xiii. 112 Planté plates are prepared from lead blanks which have been cast, rolled, cut, and stamped. |