THE 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL INVENTORS OF ALL TIME

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7 The 100 Most Influential Inventors of All Time 7

sheet or “can,” the alloy containing small amounts of lead,
cadmium, and mercury. The electrolyte consists of a satu-
rated aqueous solution of ammonium chloride containing
roughly 20 percent zinc chloride. The cathode (positive
terminal) is made of impure manganese dioxide. This
compound is blended with carbon black and electrolyte
to create a damp, active cathode mixture which is formed
around a carbon collector rod, also called an electrode. All
batteries of this type are provided with an overwrap
structure with metal covers for electrical contact.
In 1867 Leclanché gave up his job to devote full time to
his invention; a year later it was adopted by the telegraph
service of Belgium. He subsequently opened a factory to
produce the battery and other electric devices; the busi-
ness was taken over by his brother Maurice upon Georges’s
death in 1882.

Hiram Maxim


(b. Feb. 5, 1840, Sangerville, Maine, U.S.—d. Nov. 24, 1916,
London, Eng.)

H


iram Stevens Maxim was a prolific inventor best
known for the Maxim machine gun.
The eldest son of a farmer who was a locally notable
mechanic, Maxim was apprenticed at 14 to a carriage
maker. Exhibiting an early genius for invention, he
obtained his first patent in 1866, for a hair-curling iron. His
iron was followed by a device for generating illuminating
gas and a locomotive headlight; in 1878 he was hired as
chief engineer of the United States Electric Lighting
Company, the first such company in the United States. In
that post he produced a basic invention, a method of
manufacturing carbon filaments. In 1881 he exhibited an
electric pressure regulator at the Paris Exposition.
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