Definition of electromotive in English:
electromotive
adjective ɪˌlɛktrəˈməʊtɪvəˌlɛktrəˈmoʊdɪv
Physics Producing or tending to produce an electric current.
Example sentencesExamples
- The second law states that the sum of electromotive forces in a loop in the network equals the sum of potential drops, or voltages across each of the resistances, in the loop.
- An engineer with a Harvard MBA, he'd spent his entire career working at the company's electromotive division in Chicago, a world away from GM's power center in Detroit.
- Ions and molecules move through these induced gaps of the SC by diffusion and electromotive or electro-osmotic transport.
- Ion channels are selectively permeable to different classes of small ions; this is necessary for a channel to generate the electromotive forces needed for electrical signalling.
- The former is driven by a transmembrane proton motive gradient, whereas the latter is driven by a sodium electromotive gradient.
Definition of electromotive in US English:
electromotive
adjectiveəˌlektrəˈmōdivəˌlɛktrəˈmoʊdɪv
Physics Producing or tending to produce an electric current.
Example sentencesExamples
- An engineer with a Harvard MBA, he'd spent his entire career working at the company's electromotive division in Chicago, a world away from GM's power center in Detroit.
- Ion channels are selectively permeable to different classes of small ions; this is necessary for a channel to generate the electromotive forces needed for electrical signalling.
- Ions and molecules move through these induced gaps of the SC by diffusion and electromotive or electro-osmotic transport.
- The second law states that the sum of electromotive forces in a loop in the network equals the sum of potential drops, or voltages across each of the resistances, in the loop.
- The former is driven by a transmembrane proton motive gradient, whereas the latter is driven by a sodium electromotive gradient.