<P> The question of how batteries (galvanic cells) generate an emf is one that occupied scientists for most of the 19th century . The "seat of the electromotive force" was eventually determined by Walther Nernst to be primarily at the interfaces between the electrodes and the electrolyte . </P> <P> Molecules are groups of atoms held together by chemical bonds, and these bonds consist of electrical forces between electrons (negative) and protons (positive). The molecule in isolation is a stable entity, but when different molecules are brought together, some types of molecules are able to steal electrons from others, resulting in charge separation . This redistribution of charge is accompanied by a change in energy of the system, and a reconfiguration of the atoms in the molecules . The gain of an electron is termed "reduction" and the loss of an electron is termed "oxidation". Reactions in which such electron exchange occurs (which are the basis for batteries) are called reduction - oxidation reactions or redox reactions . In a battery, one electrode is composed of material that gains electrons from the solute, and the other electrode loses electrons, because of these fundamental molecular attributes . The same behavior can be seen in atoms themselves, and their ability to steal electrons is referred to as their electronegativity . </P> <P> As an example, a Daniell cell consists of a zinc anode (an electron collector), is oxidized as it dissolves into a zinc sulfate solution, the dissolving zinc leaving behind its electrons in the electrode according to the oxidation reaction (s = solid electrode; aq = aqueous solution): </P> <Dl> <Dd> Z n (s) → Z n (a q) 2 + + 2 e − (\ displaystyle \ mathrm (Zn_ ((s)) \ rightarrow Zn_ ((aq)) ^ (2 +) + 2e ^ (-) \)) </Dd> </Dl>

Dimensional formula for electromotive force is same as that for