Visitors: 336519
               No account yet?
Rechargeable Battery Equations  PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 19 March 2007
Description

Rechargeable Battery Equations


The rechargeable battery equations found here are used for calculating battery capacity, performance and other characteristics.

 


Rechargeable Battery Equations: Ohm’s Law

 

In a given electrical circuit, the amount of current in amperes (I) is equal to the pressure in volts (V) divided by the resistance, in ohms (R). Ohm's law formulas:

 

To find Current I = V / R

 

To find Voltage V = I x R

 

To find Resistance R = V / I

 

Rechargeable Battery Equations: Calculating Power

 

Defined by voltage (V) and current (I), Power (P) = VI.

 

Since V =IR ( Ohm's Law ), P = I2 x R and P = V2/ R

 

Power also can be described by energy emitted per unit of time:

 

P = E / t.

Thus E = VIt = qV.


This unit of measurement is known typically as a Watt/hr.

 

Rechargeable Battery Equations: What is C-Rate?

Charge and discharge current of a battery is called C-rate. For example, 1C is the battery capacity for 1 hour fully discharged. A 2400mAh battery has a 1C of 2400mAh.

 

  • 1C from a 1000mAh battery is 1000mAh of current for one hour if discharged at 1C rate.
  • 1C is often referred to as a one-hour discharge.
  • a 0.5C would be a two-hour, 0.25 C would be for 4 hours.
  • a 0.1C a 10-hour discharge.

 

In other words C-rate X hours = 1C, therefore 0.25C X 4 hours = 1C.

The same equation can be used for high discharge that occurs in less than 1 hour. Let’s assume the following examples for a 2500 mAh battery:

  • For this battery is C = 2500 mAh
  • At 2C, the battery is delivering 2 X 2500 mA = 5000 mAh.
  • Therefore the duration of the 2C discharge is C-rate X time = Capacity, 2C x 0.5h = 2 x 2500 mAh X 0.5h = 2500 mA.
  • At 4C, a 1000mAh battery would deliver 4000mA for 15 minutes.

 

C-Rate Reality

  •  C-Rates provided my manufacturers are based on slow discharge of 0.1 to 0.25C.
  •  Higher rate discharge results in less total Current being delivered.
  •  Higher rate discharge causes internal energy losses and a voltage drop.
  •  The battery reaches the low-end voltage cut-off sooner at higher C-rates.

 

 




Did you enjoy this article? Please bookmark it onto:
Digg!Reddit!Del.icio.us!Spurl!Wists!Simpy!Newsvine!Blinklist!Furl!Fark!Blogmarks!Yahoo!Smarking!Netvouz!Shadows!RawSugar!Ma.gnolia!FeedMeLinks!BlinkBits!Tailrank!linkaGoGo!

User reviews

There are no user reviews for this item.

Add new review



 
< Prev   Next >