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Wheelchair, electric with batteries

Mobility aids Self-propelled vehicle Storage batteries, wet Vehicles, self-propelled Wheelchair, electric (spillable or non-spillable type batteries), 9 Wheelchair, electric with batteries... [Pg.27]

Wheelchair. Electric with batteries 3171 60 (thinner than 254 microns but not ... [Pg.744]

Whenever you start a car, use a battery-powered device, apply a rust inhibitor to a piece of metal, or use bleach to whiten your clothes, you deal with some aspect of electrochemistry. Electrochemistry is that branch of science that involves the interaction of electrical energy and chemistry. Many of our daily activities use some form of electrochemistry. Just imagine how your life would be in a world without batteries. What immediately comes to mind is the loss of power for our portable electronic devices. While this would certainly be an inconvenience, consider the more critical needs of those with battery-powered wheelchairs, hearing aids, or heart pacemakers. In this chapter, we examine the basic principles of electrochemistry and some of their applications in our lives. [Pg.171]

Battery acid Battery fluid, acid, 8 Battery fluid, alkali, 8 Battery-powered equipment, 9 Battery-powered vehicle, 9 Battery, wet, filled with acid or alkali with automobile (or named self-propelled vehicle or mechanical equipment containing internal combustion engine) Battery, wet, with wheelchair Cells containing sodium, 4.3 Corrosive battery fluid Electric storage batteries Electrolyte (acid) for batteries Electrolyte (acid or alkali) for batteries Electrolyte (alkali) for batteries Heat producing article, battery operated equipment, 9 Lithium batteries, 9 Lithium batteries contained in equipment, 9 Lithium batteries packed with equipment, 9 M86 fuel, 3.2... [Pg.27]

Other acid DMFC systems have been investigated during the late 1970s and early 1980s for different appUcatimis, such as military communication systems (US Army) and electric wheelchairs (Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm), and golf carts driven by DMFC in conjunction with lead acid batteries (Hitachi,... [Pg.8]


See other pages where Wheelchair, electric with batteries is mentioned: [Pg.786]    [Pg.786]    [Pg.380]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.411]    [Pg.11]    [Pg.359]    [Pg.29]    [Pg.1148]    [Pg.1149]    [Pg.1237]    [Pg.1238]    [Pg.1213]    [Pg.1214]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.27 ]




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