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  2. Electroplating - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electroplating

    Electroplating was invented by Italian chemist Luigi Valentino Brugnatelli in 1805. Brugnatelli used his colleague Alessandro Volta 's invention of five years earlier, the voltaic pile , to facilitate the first electrodeposition.

  3. Luigi Valentino Brugnatelli - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luigi_Valentino_Brugnatelli

    Luigi Valentino Brugnatelli (also Luigi Gaspare Brugnatelli or Luigi Vincenzo Brugnatelli) (14 February 1761 in Pavia – 24 October 1818 in Pavia) was an Italian chemist and inventor who discovered the process for electroplating in 1805. [1]

  4. John Wright (inventor) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Wright_(inventor)

    John Wright (1808–1844) was a surgeon from Birmingham, England who invented a process of electroplating involving potassium cyanide. The process was patented in 1840 by Wright's associate George Richards Elkington. He was born on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent and was apprenticed to a Dr Spearman in Rotherham, Yorkshire.

  5. List of pre-Columbian inventions and innovations of ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pre-Columbian...

    Electroplating – the Moche independently developed electroplating technology without any Old World influences. The Moche used electricity derived from chemicals to gild copper with a thin layer of gold. In order to start the electroplating process, the Moche first concocted a very corrosive and a highly acidic liquid solution in which they ...

  6. History of electrochemistry - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_electrochemistry

    Scheme of Ritter's apparatus to separate water into hydrogen and oxygen by electrolysis. In 1800, English chemists William Nicholson and Johann Wilhelm Ritter succeeded in separating water into hydrogen and oxygen by electrolysis. Soon thereafter, Ritter discovered the process of electroplating.

  7. Alexander Parkes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Parkes

    Alexander Parkes was born at Suffolk Street, Birmingham, the fourth son of James Mears Parkes and his wife Kerenhappuch Childs. Samuel Harrison, described by Sir Josiah Mason as the inventor of the split-ring (or key-ring) and widely credited with the invention of the steel pen, was his great-uncle. [6]

  8. George Richards Elkington - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Richards_Elkington

    George Richards Elkington (1801–1865) by Samuel West The old Elkington Silver Electroplating Works in Birmingham Commemorative inkstand, about 1850, Elkington & Co. V&A Museum no. 481&A-1901 George Richards Elkington (17 October 1801 – 22 September 1865) was a manufacturer from Birmingham , England.

  9. Galvanic cell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Galvanic_cell

    In 1799 Volta invented the voltaic pile, which is a stack of galvanic cells each consisting of a metal disk, an electrolyte layer, and a disk of a different metal. He built it entirely out of non-biological material to challenge Galvani's (and the later experimenter Leopoldo Nobili )'s animal electricity theory in favor of his own metal-metal ...