The word was coined in 1834 from the
Greek ἄνοδος (
anodos), 'ascent', by
William Whewell, who had been consulted The use of
East to mean the
in direction (actually
in →
East →
sunrise →
up) may appear contrived. Previously, as related in the first reference cited above, Faraday had used the more straightforward term
eisode (the doorway where the current enters). His motivation for changing it to something meaning
the East electrode (other candidates had been
eastode,
oriode and
anatolode) was to make it immune to a possible later change in the direction convention for
current, whose exact nature was not known at the time. The reference he used to this effect was the Earth's magnetic field direction, which at that time was believed to be invariant. He fundamentally defined his arbitrary orientation for the cell as being that in which the internal current would run parallel to and in the same direction as a hypothetical
magnetizing current loop around the local line of latitude, which would induce a magnetic
dipole field oriented like the Earth's. This made the internal current East to West as previously mentioned, but in the event of a later convention change, it would have become West to East, so that the East electrode would not have been the
way in anymore. Therefore,
eisode would have become inappropriate, whereas
anode meaning
East electrode would have remained correct with respect to the unchanged direction of the actual phenomenon underlying the current, then unknown but, he thought, unambiguously defined by the magnetic reference. In retrospect the name change was unfortunate, not only because the Greek roots alone do not reveal the anode's function any more, but more importantly because as we now know, the Earth's magnetic field direction on which the
anode term is based is subject to
reversals whereas the
current direction convention on which the
eisode term was based has no reason to change in the future. Since the later discovery of the
electron, an easier to remember and more durably correct technically although historically false, etymology has been suggested: anode, from the Greek
anodos,
way up, the way (up) out of the cell (or other device) for electrons. ==Electrolytic anode==