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Battery nomenclature

Standard battery nomenclature describes portable dry cell batteries that have physical dimensions and electrical characteristics interchangeable between manufacturers. The long history of disposable dry cells means that many manufacturer-specific and national standards were used to designate sizes, long before international standards were reached. Technical standards for battery sizes and types are set by standards organizations such as International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) and American National Standards Institute (ANSI). Popular sizes are still referred to by old standard or manufacturer designations, and some non-systematic designations have been included in current international standards due to wide use.

The complete nomenclature for the battery will fully specify the size, chemistry, terminal arrangements, and special characteristics of a battery. The same physically interchangeable cell size may have widely different characteristics; physical interchangeability is not the sole factor in substitution of batteries.

National standards for dry cell batteries have been developed by ANSI, JIS, British national standards, and others. Civilian, commercial, government, and military standards all exist. Two of the most prevalent standards currently in use are the IEC 60086 series and the ANSI C18.1 series. Both standards give dimensions, standard performance characteristics, and safety information.

Modern standards contain both systematic names for cell types that give information on the composition and approximate size of the cells, as well as arbitrary numeric codes for cell size.

History of the IEC standard edit

The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) was established in France in 1906 and co-ordinates development of standards for a wide range of electrical products. The IEC maintains two committees, TC21 established in 1933 for rechargeable batteries, and TC35 established in 1948 for primary batteries, to develop standards.[1] The current designation system was adopted in 1992. Battery types are designated with a letter/number sequence indicating number of cells, cell chemistry, cell shape, dimensions, and special characteristics. Certain cell designations from earlier revisions of the standard have been retained.[2]

The first IEC standards for battery sizes were issued in 1957.[3] Since 1992, International standard IEC 60086 defines an alphanumeric coding system for batteries.[2][4] British standard 397 for primary batteries was withdrawn and replaced by the IEC standard in 1996.[5]

History of the ANSI standard edit

Standardization of batteries in the United States started in 1919, when the US National Bureau of Standards published recommended test procedures and standard dimensions of cells.[6] American standards were revised several times during the following decades, as new sizes of cells were introduced and new chemistry developed, including chloride, alkaline, mercury and rechargeable types.

The first American Standards Association (predecessor to ANSI) standard C18 appeared in 1928. It listed cell sizes using a letter code, roughly in order of size from smallest (A) to larger types. The only numerical designation was the 6-inch tall "No. 6" cell. The older "No. 1" through "No. 5" batteries were discontinued, each being 1 to 5 inches high respectively, although the similarly sized Burgess No. 1 (C cell) and No. 2 (D cell) were still produced under that name through the 1950s. Eventually, the No. 6 was phased out by the 1970s and slowly replaced with the 6-volt four-cell battery. The 1934 edition of the C18 standard expanded the nomenclature system to include series and parallel arrays of cells. In 1954, mercury batteries were included in the standard. The 1959 edition identified types suitable for use with transistor radios. In 1967, NEMA took over responsibility for development from the National Bureau of Standards. The 12th edition of C18 began to be harmonized with the IEC standard. Rechargeable batteries were introduced in the C18 standard in 1984, and lithium types were standardized in 1991.

In 1999 the ANSI standards were extensively revised and separate safety standards provided. The current edition of the ANSI standards designates sizes with an arbitrary number, with a prefix letter to designate shape, and with a suffix letter or letters to identify different chemistry, terminals, or other features.

IEC battery nomenclature edit

Three different technical committees of IEC make standards on batteries: TC21 (lead-acid), SC21 (other secondary) and TC35 (primary). Each group has published standards relating to the nomenclature of batteries - IEC 60095 for lead-acid starter batteries, IEC 61951-1 and 61951-2 for Ni-Cd and Ni-MH batteries, IEC 61960 for Li-ion, and IEC 60086-1 for primary batteries.

Primary batteries edit

Battery numbering edit

 
IEC 60086 battery type designation system

Examples of the IEC nomenclature are batteries coded R20, 4R25X, 4LR25-2, 6F22, 6P222/162, CR17345 and LR2616J. The letters and numbers in the code indicate the number of cells, cell chemistry, shape, dimensions, the number of parallel paths in the assembled battery and any modifying letters deemed necessary. A multi-section battery (two or more voltages from the same package) will have a multi-section designation.

Prior to October 1990, round cells were designated with a sequential numeric size code ranging from R06 through to R70, for example R20 is the size of a "D" cell or ANSI"13" size. After October 1990, round cells are systematically identified with a number derived from their diameter and height. Primary cells larger than 100 mm in diameter or height are designated with an oblique "/" between diameter and height.

Examples of IEC battery designations
Designation Series Cells System Shape Standardized code or diameter code Diameter modifier Height code Height adjustment modifier Modifier(s) Parallel strings Remarks
R20 R 20 A single zinc-carbon cell, "size 20" which is equivalent to D, or ANSI "13" size
4R25X 4 R 25 X A zinc-carbon lantern battery, consisting of 4 round "size 25" cells in series. Terminated with spring terminals.
4LR25-2 4 L R 25 2 An alkaline lantern battery, consisting of 2 parallel strings of 4 round "size 25" cells in series
6F22 6 F 22 A zinc-carbon rectangular battery, consisting of 6 flat "size 22" cells. Equivalent to a PP3 or transistor battery.
6P222/162 6 P 222 162 A zinc-carbon battery, maximum dimensions: length 192 mm, width 113 mm, and height 162 mm. Consisting of 6 cells in series.
CR17345 C R 17 345 A single-cell round lithium cell, 17 mm diameter, 34.5 mm height
LR2616J L R 26 16 J A single-cell round alkaline battery, 26.2 mm diameter, 1.67 mm height
LR8D425 L R 8.5 D 425 A single-cell round alkaline battery, 8.8 mm diameter (8.5 +0.3 for modifier) and 42.5 mm long, AAAA or ANSI "25" size

Electrochemical system edit

The first letter identifies the chemical composition of the battery, which also implies a nominal voltage.

It is common to refer to the negative electrode first in IEC battery definitions.

IEC codes for battery electrochemical systems[7]
Letter
code
Negative electrode Electrolyte Positive electrode Nominal
voltage (V)
Maximum open
circuit voltage (V)
Main article
(none) Zinc Ammonium chloride, Zinc chloride Manganese dioxide 1.5 1.725 Zinc-carbon battery
A Zinc Ammonium chloride, Zinc chloride Oxygen 1.4 1.55 Zinc-air battery
B Lithium Organic electrolyte Carbon monofluoride 3.0 3.7 Lithium battery
C Lithium Organic electrolyte Manganese dioxide 3.0 3.7
E Lithium Non-aqueous inorganic electrolyte Thionyl chloride 3.6 3.9
F Lithium Organic electrolyte Iron disulfide 1.5 1.83
G Lithium Organic electrolyte Copper(II) oxide 1.5 2.3
L Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Manganese dioxide 1.5 1.65 Alkaline battery
M
(withdrawn)
Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Mercuric oxide 1.35 Mercury battery
N
(withdrawn)
Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Mercuric oxide, manganese dioxide 1.4
P Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Oxygen 1.4 1.68 Zinc-air battery
S Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Silver oxide 1.55 1.63 Silver-oxide battery
Z Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Manganese dioxide, nickel oxyhydroxide 1.5 1.78 Nickel oxyhydroxide battery

Italics indicate a chemical system unlikely to be found in consumer or general-purpose batteries, or withdrawn from the current standard.

Shape edit

 
LR44 alkaline cell

Shape codes are:

R Round, (coin, button or cylindrical)
P Not round
F Flat (layer built)
S Square (or rectangular or prismatic)

The F and S shape codes are still in use but are not to be used for new battery definitions.

Size code edit

Certain sizes, given by one or two digit numbers, represent standard size codes from previous editions of the standard. Sizes given as 4 or more digits indicate the diameter of the battery and the overall height.

The numbers in the code correlate with the battery dimensions. For batteries with dimensions of < 100 mm the (truncated) diameter in millimetres, followed by the height in tenths of a millimetre; for batteries with a single dimension ≥ 100 mm the diameter in millimetres, then a slash (/) followed by the height in millimetres.

As well as the recommended size code definitions there are also ten modifying suffix letters that can be added to the end of the specific size code. These run from A to L (omitting F and I) and depending on the largest dimension of the battery can either signify 0.0 – 0.9 mm maximum dimensions or 0.00 – 0.09 mm maximum dimensions with A being 0.0 or 0.00 and L being 0.9 or 0.09.

For flat cells the diameter code is given as the diameter of a circle circumscribed around the whole cell's area.

Standardized size codes for round batteries which do not follow the current nomenclature but have been retained for ease of use are given by a one or two digit number following the R. These include but are not limited to: [8]

IEC size codes for round batteries
Number
code
Nominal
diameter
Nominal
height
Common name
R25 32 91 F
R20 34.2 61.5 D
R14 26.2 50.0 C
R6 14.5 50.5 AA
R1 12.0 30.2 N
R03 10.5 44.5 AAA

Round button batteries also carry two-digit size codes such as R44, see the button battery table for typical dimensions. Other round, flat, and square sizes have been standardized but are used mostly for components of multi-cell batteries.

 
Assorted sizes of button and coin cells, including alkaline and silver oxide chemistries. Four rectangular 9 V batteries are also shown, for size comparison. Enlarge to see the button and coin cell size code markings.

The following is a partial list of IEC standard recommended diameter and height codes for round cells:

IEC recommended round cell diameter and height codes
Number
code
Maximum
diameter
Maximum
height
4 4.8
5 5.8
6 6.8
7 7.9
9 9.5
10 10.0
11 11.6
12 12.5 1.20
16 16 1.60
20 20 2.00
23 23
24 24.5
25 2.50
30 3.00
36 3.60
50 5.00

Modifiers edit

After the package size code(s), additional letters may optionally appear. Terminal styles and variants of the same battery can be designated with the letters X or Y. Performance levels may also be designated with a C, P, S, CF, HH, or HB or other letter suffixes. An appended letter "W" states that this battery complies with all the requirements of the IEC 60086-3 standard for watch batteries, such as dimensional tolerance, chemical leakage, and test methods.

Battery categories edit

IEC nomenclature classifies batteries according to their general shape and overall physical appearance. These categories, however, are not identified in the IEC battery nomenclature:[9][10]

  • Category 1: Cylindrical cells with protruding positive and recessed or flat negative terminals. The positive terminal shall be concentric with the cell overall. The total height of the cell is not necessarily the same as the total distance between terminals (This accounts for nubs, recesses and battery casings). The cell casing is insulated. E.g. R1 & LR8D425
  • Category 2: Cylindrical cells with protruding positive and protruding or flat negative terminals. The total height of the cell is the same as the total distance between terminals. The cell casing is insulated. E.g. CR14250, LR61
  • Category 3: Cylindrical cells with flat positive and negative terminals. The total height of the cell is not necessarily the same as the total distance between terminals (This accounts for any protuberances from the negative terminal). The cell casing is in connection with the positive terminal. No part of the cell is allowed to protrude from the positive terminal surface. E.g. CR11108, LR9
  • Category 4: Cylindrical cells with a protruding flat negative terminal. The total height of the cell is the same as the total distance between terminals. The cell casing is the positive terminal and it is recommended that the outer surface is used for positive connection even though it is possible from the base. No part of the cell is allowed to protrude from the positive terminal surface. E.g. LR44, CR2032
  • Category 5: Cylindrical batteries which fit none of the other categories. E.g. R40, 8LR23
  • Category 6: Non-cylindrical batteries. E.g. 3R12, 4R25, 6F22

Secondary batteries edit

Nickel-cadmium and nickel-metal hydride batteries edit

Nickel-cadmium and Nickel-metal hydride batteries follow a similar rule as the system above;[11][12] especially cylindrical cells designed to be dimensionally interchangeable with primary batteries use the same designation as the primary batteries, the codes for electrochemical systems as below.

Letter
code
Negative electrode Positive electrode Nominal
voltage (V)
Main article
H Hydrogen-absorbing alloy Nickel oxide 1.2 Nickel-metal hydride battery
K Cadmium Nickel oxide 1.2 Nickel-cadmium battery

All other cells use the following system:

  • Small prismatic cells: KF or HF followed by maximum width in mm / maximum thickness in mm / maximum height in mm. E.g. KF 18/07/49
  • Cylindrical cells: KR or HR followed by a letter indicating discharge rate (L, M, H or X for low, medium, high and very high, respectively); then another letter may be added to indicate use at elevated temperatures (T or U) or rapid charge (R); then maximum diameter in mm / maximum height in mm. E.g. KRL 33/62, HRHR 23/43
  • Button cells: KB or HB followed by maximum diameter in tenths of mm / maximum height in tenths of mm. E.g. KBL 116/055

Lithium-ion batteries edit

 
IEC 61960 battery type designation system

Lithium-ion batteries have a different rule for naming, which applies both to batteries of multiple cells and single cell. They will be designated as:[13]

N1A1A2A3N2/N3/N4-N5

where N1 denotes number of series connected cells and N5 denotes number of parallel connected cells (only when the number is greater than 1); these numbers only apply to batteries.

A1 indicates the basis of negative electrode phase, where I is for lithium ion and L is for lithium metal or alloy.

A2 indicates the basis of positive electrode phase, and could be C, N, M, V or T for cobalt, nickel, manganese, vanadium and titanium respectively.

A3 is for the shape of the cell; either R for cylinder or P for prism.

N2 is the maximum diameter (in case of cylindrical cells) or thickness (prismatic cells) in mm.

N3 is only used for prismatic cells to denote the maximum width in mm.

N4 is the maximum overall height in mm.

(For any of the lengths above, if the dimension is smaller than 1 mm it can be written as tN, where N is tenths of mm)

E.g. ICR19/66, ICP9/35/48, 2ICP20/34/70, 1ICP20/68/70-2

ANSI battery nomenclature edit

Early editions of the ANSI standard used a letter code to identify the dimensions of the cell. Since at the time there were only carbon-zinc cells, no suffix letters or other notation were required. The letter system was introduced in the 1924 edition of the standard, with letters A through J assigned approximately in order of increasing cell volume, for cells typically manufactured at that time.[6] By 1934, the system had been revised and extended to 17 sizes ranging from NS at 716 inch diameter by 34 inch height, through size J at 1+34 inches diameter by 5+78 inches high, to the largest standard cell which retained its old designation of No. 6 and which was 2+12 inches in diameter and 6 inches high.

Size and shape codes edit

 
4.5-Volt, D, C, AA, AAA, AAAA, A23, 9-Volt, CR2032 and LR44 cells

The current edition of the standard uses a numerical code to show the cell size. Common round cell sizes are:

ANSI primary cell sizes and equivalent size designations
Number
code
Other name IEC size Example
13 D R20
14 C R14
15 AA R6
 
15A LR6 SIZE/FORMAT AA 1.5V
24 AAA R03
 
24A LR03 SIZE/FORMAT AAA 1.5V
25 AAAA R8D425

Since these IEC and ANSI battery standards have been harmonized, for example, an R20 cell will have the same dimensions as an ANSI 13 cell.

Flat cells, used as components of multi-cell batteries, have an F prefix and a series of numbers to identify sizes. Coin cells were assigned size codes in the 5000 range.

Secondary cells using systems H and K (nickel-metal hydride and nickel-iron sulfide) have a separate series of size codes, but the cells are dimensionally interchangeable with primary cells.

System and performance suffix letters edit

The electrochemical system and performance information is given in suffix letters.

ANSI suffix letters[2]
Letter Significance IEC system letter
(none) carbon-zinc (none)
A alkaline L
AC alkaline industrial
AP alkaline photographic
C carbon-zinc industrial (none)
CD carbon zinc industrial, heavy duty
D carbon zinc, heavy duty
F carbon zinc, general purpose
H nickel metal hydride
(rechargeable)
H
K nickel cadmium
(rechargeable)
K
LB lithium-carbon monofluoride B
LC lithium-manganese dioxide C
LF lithium-iron disulfide F
M
(withdrawn)
mercuric oxide M
(withdrawn)
SO silver oxide S
SOP silver oxide photographic
Z zinc-air P
ZD zinc-air, heavy duty

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ www.iec.ch . Archived from the original on 17 December 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2010. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. ^ a b c David Linden, Thomas B. Reddy (ed). Handbook Of Batteries 3rd Edition, McGraw-Hill, New York, 2002 ISBN 0-07-135978-8 chapter 4
  3. ^ M. Barak Electrochemical power sources: primary and secondary batteries, IET, 1980 ISBN 0-906048-26-5, page 51
  4. ^ Thomas Roy Crompton, Battery reference book,Newnes, 2000 ISBN 0-7506-4625-X, Appendix 2
  5. ^ . Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
  6. ^ a b Ron Runkles (ed) A Brief History of the Standardization of Portable Cells and Batteries in the United States, American National Standards Institute Accredited Standards Committee C18 on Portable Cells and Batteries, 2002 , ANSI Battery Standardization History . Retrieved 2010 Jan 9.
  7. ^ IEC 60086-1 ed10.0
  8. ^ A more complete table is found in the current IEC standard (Table C.1 Annex C) or in Barak 1980 page 53
  9. ^ As indicated in IEC 60086-2 §7
  10. ^ All information is correct to the current version (2011) of IEC 60086 (Parts 1 to 3). As of Thursday 9 June 2011.
  11. ^ IEC61951-1 ed2.1
  12. ^ IEC 61951-2 ed2.0
  13. ^ IEC 61960 ed1.0

battery, nomenclature, standard, battery, nomenclature, describes, portable, cell, batteries, that, have, physical, dimensions, electrical, characteristics, interchangeable, between, manufacturers, long, history, disposable, cells, means, that, many, manufactu. Standard battery nomenclature describes portable dry cell batteries that have physical dimensions and electrical characteristics interchangeable between manufacturers The long history of disposable dry cells means that many manufacturer specific and national standards were used to designate sizes long before international standards were reached Technical standards for battery sizes and types are set by standards organizations such as International Electrotechnical Commission IEC and American National Standards Institute ANSI Popular sizes are still referred to by old standard or manufacturer designations and some non systematic designations have been included in current international standards due to wide use The complete nomenclature for the battery will fully specify the size chemistry terminal arrangements and special characteristics of a battery The same physically interchangeable cell size may have widely different characteristics physical interchangeability is not the sole factor in substitution of batteries National standards for dry cell batteries have been developed by ANSI JIS British national standards and others Civilian commercial government and military standards all exist Two of the most prevalent standards currently in use are the IEC 60086 series and the ANSI C18 1 series Both standards give dimensions standard performance characteristics and safety information Modern standards contain both systematic names for cell types that give information on the composition and approximate size of the cells as well as arbitrary numeric codes for cell size Contents 1 History of the IEC standard 2 History of the ANSI standard 3 IEC battery nomenclature 3 1 Primary batteries 3 1 1 Battery numbering 3 1 2 Electrochemical system 3 1 3 Shape 3 1 4 Size code 3 1 5 Modifiers 3 1 6 Battery categories 3 2 Secondary batteries 3 2 1 Nickel cadmium and nickel metal hydride batteries 3 2 2 Lithium ion batteries 4 ANSI battery nomenclature 4 1 Size and shape codes 4 2 System and performance suffix letters 5 See also 6 ReferencesHistory of the IEC standard editThe International Electrotechnical Commission IEC was established in France in 1906 and co ordinates development of standards for a wide range of electrical products The IEC maintains two committees TC21 established in 1933 for rechargeable batteries and TC35 established in 1948 for primary batteries to develop standards 1 The current designation system was adopted in 1992 Battery types are designated with a letter number sequence indicating number of cells cell chemistry cell shape dimensions and special characteristics Certain cell designations from earlier revisions of the standard have been retained 2 The first IEC standards for battery sizes were issued in 1957 3 Since 1992 International standard IEC 60086 defines an alphanumeric coding system for batteries 2 4 British standard 397 for primary batteries was withdrawn and replaced by the IEC standard in 1996 5 History of the ANSI standard editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Standardization of batteries in the United States started in 1919 when the US National Bureau of Standards published recommended test procedures and standard dimensions of cells 6 American standards were revised several times during the following decades as new sizes of cells were introduced and new chemistry developed including chloride alkaline mercury and rechargeable types The first American Standards Association predecessor to ANSI standard C18 appeared in 1928 It listed cell sizes using a letter code roughly in order of size from smallest A to larger types The only numerical designation was the 6 inch tall No 6 cell The older No 1 through No 5 batteries were discontinued each being 1 to 5 inches high respectively although the similarly sized Burgess No 1 C cell and No 2 D cell were still produced under that name through the 1950s Eventually the No 6 was phased out by the 1970s and slowly replaced with the 6 volt four cell battery The 1934 edition of the C18 standard expanded the nomenclature system to include series and parallel arrays of cells In 1954 mercury batteries were included in the standard The 1959 edition identified types suitable for use with transistor radios In 1967 NEMA took over responsibility for development from the National Bureau of Standards The 12th edition of C18 began to be harmonized with the IEC standard Rechargeable batteries were introduced in the C18 standard in 1984 and lithium types were standardized in 1991 In 1999 the ANSI standards were extensively revised and separate safety standards provided The current edition of the ANSI standards designates sizes with an arbitrary number with a prefix letter to designate shape and with a suffix letter or letters to identify different chemistry terminals or other features IEC battery nomenclature editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Three different technical committees of IEC make standards on batteries TC21 lead acid SC21 other secondary and TC35 primary Each group has published standards relating to the nomenclature of batteries IEC 60095 for lead acid starter batteries IEC 61951 1 and 61951 2 for Ni Cd and Ni MH batteries IEC 61960 for Li ion and IEC 60086 1 for primary batteries Primary batteries edit Battery numbering edit nbsp IEC 60086 battery type designation systemExamples of the IEC nomenclature are batteries coded R20 4R25X 4LR25 2 6F22 6P222 162 CR17345 and LR2616J The letters and numbers in the code indicate the number of cells cell chemistry shape dimensions the number of parallel paths in the assembled battery and any modifying letters deemed necessary A multi section battery two or more voltages from the same package will have a multi section designation Prior to October 1990 round cells were designated with a sequential numeric size code ranging from R06 through to R70 for example R20 is the size of a D cell or ANSI 13 size After October 1990 round cells are systematically identified with a number derived from their diameter and height Primary cells larger than 100 mm in diameter or height are designated with an oblique between diameter and height Examples of IEC battery designations Designation Series Cells System Shape Standardized code or diameter code Diameter modifier Height code Height adjustment modifier Modifier s Parallel strings RemarksR20 R 20 A single zinc carbon cell size 20 which is equivalent to D or ANSI 13 size4R25X 4 R 25 X A zinc carbon lantern battery consisting of 4 round size 25 cells in series Terminated with spring terminals 4LR25 2 4 L R 25 2 An alkaline lantern battery consisting of 2 parallel strings of 4 round size 25 cells in series6F22 6 F 22 A zinc carbon rectangular battery consisting of 6 flat size 22 cells Equivalent to a PP3 or transistor battery 6P222 162 6 P 222 162 A zinc carbon battery maximum dimensions length 192 mm width 113 mm and height 162 mm Consisting of 6 cells in series CR17345 C R 17 345 A single cell round lithium cell 17 mm diameter 34 5 mm heightLR2616J L R 26 16 J A single cell round alkaline battery 26 2 mm diameter 1 67 mm heightLR8D425 L R 8 5 D 425 A single cell round alkaline battery 8 8 mm diameter 8 5 0 3 for modifier and 42 5 mm long AAAA or ANSI 25 sizeElectrochemical system edit The first letter identifies the chemical composition of the battery which also implies a nominal voltage It is common to refer to the negative electrode first in IEC battery definitions IEC codes for battery electrochemical systems 7 Lettercode Negative electrode Electrolyte Positive electrode Nominalvoltage V Maximum opencircuit voltage V Main article none Zinc Ammonium chloride Zinc chloride Manganese dioxide 1 5 1 725 Zinc carbon batteryA Zinc Ammonium chloride Zinc chloride Oxygen 1 4 1 55 Zinc air batteryB Lithium Organic electrolyte Carbon monofluoride 3 0 3 7 Lithium batteryC Lithium Organic electrolyte Manganese dioxide 3 0 3 7E Lithium Non aqueous inorganic electrolyte Thionyl chloride 3 6 3 9F Lithium Organic electrolyte Iron disulfide 1 5 1 83G Lithium Organic electrolyte Copper II oxide 1 5 2 3L Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Manganese dioxide 1 5 1 65 Alkaline batteryM withdrawn Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Mercuric oxide 1 35 Mercury batteryN withdrawn Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Mercuric oxide manganese dioxide 1 4P Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Oxygen 1 4 1 68 Zinc air batteryS Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Silver oxide 1 55 1 63 Silver oxide batteryZ Zinc Alkali metal hydroxide Manganese dioxide nickel oxyhydroxide 1 5 1 78 Nickel oxyhydroxide batteryItalics indicate a chemical system unlikely to be found in consumer or general purpose batteries or withdrawn from the current standard Shape edit nbsp LR44 alkaline cellShape codes are R Round coin button or cylindrical P Not round F Flat layer built S Square or rectangular or prismatic The F and S shape codes are still in use but are not to be used for new battery definitions Size code edit Certain sizes given by one or two digit numbers represent standard size codes from previous editions of the standard Sizes given as 4 or more digits indicate the diameter of the battery and the overall height The numbers in the code correlate with the battery dimensions For batteries with dimensions of lt 100 mm the truncated diameter in millimetres followed by the height in tenths of a millimetre for batteries with a single dimension 100 mm the diameter in millimetres then a slash followed by the height in millimetres As well as the recommended size code definitions there are also ten modifying suffix letters that can be added to the end of the specific size code These run from A to L omitting F and I and depending on the largest dimension of the battery can either signify 0 0 0 9 mm maximum dimensions or 0 00 0 09 mm maximum dimensions with A being 0 0 or 0 00 and L being 0 9 or 0 09 For flat cells the diameter code is given as the diameter of a circle circumscribed around the whole cell s area You can help expand this section with text translated from the corresponding article in German June 2022 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the German article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 8 923 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing German Wikipedia article at de Liste aller Standardgrossen fur Rundzellen nach IEC 60086 bis 1990 see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated de Liste aller Standardgrossen fur Rundzellen nach IEC 60086 bis 1990 to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation Standardized size codes for round batteries which do not follow the current nomenclature but have been retained for ease of use are given by a one or two digit number following the R These include but are not limited to 8 IEC size codes for round batteries Numbercode Nominaldiameter Nominalheight Common nameR25 32 91 FR20 34 2 61 5 DR14 26 2 50 0 CR6 14 5 50 5 AAR1 12 0 30 2 NR03 10 5 44 5 AAARound button batteries also carry two digit size codes such as R44 see the button battery table for typical dimensions Other round flat and square sizes have been standardized but are used mostly for components of multi cell batteries nbsp Assorted sizes of button and coin cells including alkaline and silver oxide chemistries Four rectangular 9 V batteries are also shown for size comparison Enlarge to see the button and coin cell size code markings The following is a partial list of IEC standard recommended diameter and height codes for round cells IEC recommended round cell diameter and height codes Numbercode Maximumdiameter Maximumheight4 4 85 5 86 6 87 7 99 9 510 10 011 11 612 12 5 1 2016 16 1 6020 20 2 0023 2324 24 525 2 5030 3 0036 3 6050 5 00Modifiers edit After the package size code s additional letters may optionally appear Terminal styles and variants of the same battery can be designated with the letters X or Y Performance levels may also be designated with a C P S CF HH or HB or other letter suffixes An appended letter W states that this battery complies with all the requirements of the IEC 60086 3 standard for watch batteries such as dimensional tolerance chemical leakage and test methods Battery categories edit IEC nomenclature classifies batteries according to their general shape and overall physical appearance These categories however are not identified in the IEC battery nomenclature 9 10 Category 1 Cylindrical cells with protruding positive and recessed or flat negative terminals The positive terminal shall be concentric with the cell overall The total height of the cell is not necessarily the same as the total distance between terminals This accounts for nubs recesses and battery casings The cell casing is insulated E g R1 amp LR8D425 Category 2 Cylindrical cells with protruding positive and protruding or flat negative terminals The total height of the cell is the same as the total distance between terminals The cell casing is insulated E g CR14250 LR61 Category 3 Cylindrical cells with flat positive and negative terminals The total height of the cell is not necessarily the same as the total distance between terminals This accounts for any protuberances from the negative terminal The cell casing is in connection with the positive terminal No part of the cell is allowed to protrude from the positive terminal surface E g CR11108 LR9 Category 4 Cylindrical cells with a protruding flat negative terminal The total height of the cell is the same as the total distance between terminals The cell casing is the positive terminal and it is recommended that the outer surface is used for positive connection even though it is possible from the base No part of the cell is allowed to protrude from the positive terminal surface E g LR44 CR2032 Category 5 Cylindrical batteries which fit none of the other categories E g R40 8LR23 Category 6 Non cylindrical batteries E g 3R12 4R25 6F22Secondary batteries edit Nickel cadmium and nickel metal hydride batteries edit Nickel cadmium and Nickel metal hydride batteries follow a similar rule as the system above 11 12 especially cylindrical cells designed to be dimensionally interchangeable with primary batteries use the same designation as the primary batteries the codes for electrochemical systems as below Lettercode Negative electrode Positive electrode Nominalvoltage V Main articleH Hydrogen absorbing alloy Nickel oxide 1 2 Nickel metal hydride batteryK Cadmium Nickel oxide 1 2 Nickel cadmium batteryAll other cells use the following system Small prismatic cells KF or HF followed by maximum width in mm maximum thickness in mm maximum height in mm E g KF 18 07 49 Cylindrical cells KR or HR followed by a letter indicating discharge rate L M H or X for low medium high and very high respectively then another letter may be added to indicate use at elevated temperatures T or U or rapid charge R then maximum diameter in mm maximum height in mm E g KRL 33 62 HRHR 23 43 Button cells KB or HB followed by maximum diameter in tenths of mm maximum height in tenths of mm E g KBL 116 055Lithium ion batteries edit nbsp IEC 61960 battery type designation systemLithium ion batteries have a different rule for naming which applies both to batteries of multiple cells and single cell They will be designated as 13 N1A1A2A3N2 N3 N4 N5where N1 denotes number of series connected cells and N5 denotes number of parallel connected cells only when the number is greater than 1 these numbers only apply to batteries A1 indicates the basis of negative electrode phase where I is for lithium ion and L is for lithium metal or alloy A2 indicates the basis of positive electrode phase and could be C N M V or T for cobalt nickel manganese vanadium and titanium respectively A3 is for the shape of the cell either R for cylinder or P for prism N2 is the maximum diameter in case of cylindrical cells or thickness prismatic cells in mm N3 is only used for prismatic cells to denote the maximum width in mm N4 is the maximum overall height in mm For any of the lengths above if the dimension is smaller than 1 mm it can be written as tN where N is tenths of mm E g ICR19 66 ICP9 35 48 2ICP20 34 70 1ICP20 68 70 2ANSI battery nomenclature editEarly editions of the ANSI standard used a letter code to identify the dimensions of the cell Since at the time there were only carbon zinc cells no suffix letters or other notation were required The letter system was introduced in the 1924 edition of the standard with letters A through J assigned approximately in order of increasing cell volume for cells typically manufactured at that time 6 By 1934 the system had been revised and extended to 17 sizes ranging from NS at 7 16 inch diameter by 3 4 inch height through size J at 1 3 4 inches diameter by 5 7 8 inches high to the largest standard cell which retained its old designation of No 6 and which was 2 1 2 inches in diameter and 6 inches high Size and shape codes edit nbsp 4 5 Volt D C AA AAA AAAA A23 9 Volt CR2032 and LR44 cellsThe current edition of the standard uses a numerical code to show the cell size Common round cell sizes are ANSI primary cell sizes and equivalent size designations Numbercode Other name IEC size Example13 D R2014 C R1415 AA R6 nbsp 15A LR6 SIZE FORMAT AA 1 5V24 AAA R03 nbsp 24A LR03 SIZE FORMAT AAA 1 5V25 AAAA R8D425Since these IEC and ANSI battery standards have been harmonized for example an R20 cell will have the same dimensions as an ANSI 13 cell Flat cells used as components of multi cell batteries have an F prefix and a series of numbers to identify sizes Coin cells were assigned size codes in the 5000 range Secondary cells using systems H and K nickel metal hydride and nickel iron sulfide have a separate series of size codes but the cells are dimensionally interchangeable with primary cells System and performance suffix letters edit The electrochemical system and performance information is given in suffix letters ANSI suffix letters 2 Letter Significance IEC system letter none carbon zinc none A alkaline LAC alkaline industrialAP alkaline photographicC carbon zinc industrial none CD carbon zinc industrial heavy dutyD carbon zinc heavy dutyF carbon zinc general purposeH nickel metal hydride rechargeable HK nickel cadmium rechargeable KLB lithium carbon monofluoride BLC lithium manganese dioxide CLF lithium iron disulfide FM withdrawn mercuric oxide M withdrawn SO silver oxide SSOP silver oxide photographicZ zinc air PZD zinc air heavy dutySee also editBattery recycling Comparison of commercial battery types History of the battery List of battery sizes List of battery types Search for the Super Battery 2017 PBS film References edit www iec ch https web archive org web 20191217180133 https www iec ch about history techline Archived from the original on 17 December 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2010 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help a b c David Linden Thomas B Reddy ed Handbook Of Batteries 3rd Edition McGraw Hill New York 2002 ISBN 0 07 135978 8 chapter 4 M Barak Electrochemical power sources primary and secondary batteries IET 1980 ISBN 0 906048 26 5 page 51 Thomas Roy Crompton Battery reference book Newnes 2000 ISBN 0 7506 4625 X Appendix 2 British Standards Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 28 January 2010 a b Ron Runkles ed A Brief History of the Standardization of Portable Cells and Batteries in the United States American National Standards Institute Accredited Standards Committee C18 on Portable Cells and Batteries 2002 ANSI Battery Standardization History Retrieved 2010 Jan 9 IEC 60086 1 ed10 0 A more complete table is found in the current IEC standard Table C 1 Annex C or in Barak 1980 page 53 As indicated in IEC 60086 2 7 All information is correct to the current version 2011 of IEC 60086 Parts 1 to 3 As of Thursday 9 June 2011 IEC61951 1 ed2 1 IEC 61951 2 ed2 0 IEC 61960 ed1 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battery nomenclature amp oldid 1187853858 IEC 60086, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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