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Wikipedia

Lead–acid battery

The lead–acid battery is a type of rechargeable battery first invented in 1859 by French physicist Gaston Planté. It is the first type of rechargeable battery ever created. Compared to modern rechargeable batteries, lead–acid batteries have relatively low energy density. Despite this, their ability to supply high surge currents means that the cells have a relatively large power-to-weight ratio. These features, along with their low cost, make them attractive for use in motor vehicles to provide the high current required by starter motors. Lead-acid batteries suffer from relatively short cycle lifespan (usually less than 500 deep cycles) and overall lifespan (due to the "double sulfation" in the discharged state), as well as slow or long charging time.

Lead–acid battery
12v lead–acid car battery
Specific energy35–40 Wh/kg[1]
Energy density80–90 Wh/L[1]
Specific power180 W/kg[2]
Charge/discharge efficiency50%–95%[3]
Energy/consumer-price7 (sld) to 18 (fld) Wh/US$[4]
Self-discharge rate3%–20%/month[5]
Cycle durability<350 cycles[6]
Nominal cell voltage2.1 V[7]
Charge temperature intervalMin. −35°C, max. 45°C

As they are inexpensive compared to newer technologies, lead–acid batteries are widely used even when surge current is not important and other designs could provide higher energy densities. In 1999, lead–acid battery sales accounted for 40–50% of the value from batteries sold worldwide (excluding China and Russia), equivalent to a manufacturing market value of about US$15 billion.[8] Large-format lead–acid designs are widely used for storage in backup power supplies in cell phone towers, high-availability emergency power systems like hospitals, and stand-alone power systems. For these roles, modified versions of the standard cell may be used to improve storage times and reduce maintenance requirements. Gel-cells and absorbed glass-mat batteries are common in these roles, collectively known as VRLA (valve-regulated lead–acid) batteries.

In the charged state, the chemical energy of the battery is stored in the potential difference between metallic lead at the negative side and PbO2 on the positive side.

History

The French scientist Nicolas Gautherot observed in 1801 that wires that had been used for electrolysis experiments would themselves provide a small amount of "secondary" current after the main battery had been disconnected.[9] In 1859, Gaston Planté's lead–acid battery was the first battery that could be recharged by passing a reverse current through it. Planté's first model consisted of two lead sheets separated by rubber strips and rolled into a spiral.[10] His batteries were first used to power the lights in train carriages while stopped at a station. In 1881, Camille Alphonse Faure invented an improved version that consisted of a lead grid lattice, into which a lead oxide paste was pressed, forming a plate. This design was easier to mass-produce. An early manufacturer (from 1886) of lead–acid batteries was Henri Tudor.[citation needed]

Using a gel electrolyte instead of a liquid allows the battery to be used in different positions without leaking. Gel electrolyte batteries for any position were first used in the late 1920s, and in the 1930s, portable suitcase radio sets allowed the cell to be mounted vertically or horizontally (but not inverted) due to valve design.[11] In the 1970s, the valve-regulated lead–acid battery (VRLA, or "sealed") was developed, including modern absorbed glass mat (AGM) types, allowing operation in any position.

It was discovered early in 2011 that lead–acid batteries did in fact use some aspects of relativity to function, and to a lesser degree liquid metal and molten-salt batteries such as the Ca–Sb and Sn–Bi also use this effect.[12][13]

Electrochemistry

Discharge

 
Fully discharged: two identical lead sulfate plates and diluted sulfuric acid solution

In the discharged state both the positive and negative plates become lead(II) sulfate (PbSO
4
), and the electrolyte loses much of its dissolved sulfuric acid and becomes primarily water.

Negative plate reaction
Pb(s) + HSO
4
(aq) → PbSO
4
(s) + H+
(aq) + 2e

The release of two conduction electrons gives the lead electrode a negative charge.

As electrons accumulate they create an electric field which attracts hydrogen ions and repels sulfate ions, leading to a double-layer near the surface. The hydrogen ions screen the charged electrode from the solution which limits further reaction unless charge is allowed to flow out of the electrode.

Positive plate reaction
PbO
2
(s) + HSO
4
(aq) + 3H+
(aq) + 2ePbSO
4
(s) + 2H
2
O
(l)

taking advantage of the metallic conductivity of PbO
2
.

The total reaction can be written as
Pb(s) + PbO
2
(s) + 2H
2
SO
4
(aq) → 2PbSO
4
(s) + 2H
2
O
(l)  

The net energy released per mole (207 g) of Pb(s) converted to PbSO
4
(s), is ca. 400 kJ, corresponding to the formation of 36 g of water. The sum of the molecular masses of the reactants is 642.6 g/mole, so theoretically a cell can produce two faradays of charge (192,971 coulombs) from 642.6 g of reactants, or 83.4 ampere hours per kilogram for a 2-volt cell (or 13.9-ampere hours per kilogram for a 12-volt battery). This comes to 167 watt-hours per kilogram of reactants, but in practice, a lead–acid cell gives only 30–40 watt-hours per kilogram of battery, due to the mass of the water and other constituent parts.

Charging

 
Fully recharged: Lead dioxide positive plate, Lead negative plate, and concentrated aqueous sulfuric acid solution

In the fully charged state, the negative plate consists of lead, and the positive plate is lead dioxide. The electrolyte solution has a higher concentration of aqueous sulfuric acid, which stores most of the chemical energy.

Overcharging with high charging voltages generates oxygen and hydrogen gas by electrolysis of water, which bubbles out and is lost. The design of some types of lead–acid battery allows the electrolyte level to be inspected and topped up with pure water to replace any that has been lost this way.

Effect of charge level on freezing point

Because of freezing-point depression, the electrolyte is more likely to freeze in a cold environment when the battery has a low charge and a correspondingly low sulfuric acid concentration.

Ion motion

During discharge, H+
produced at the negative plates moves into the electrolyte solution and is then consumed at the positive plates, while HSO
4
is consumed at both plates. The reverse occurs during the charge. This motion can be electrically driven proton flow or Grotthuss mechanism, or by diffusion through the medium, or by the flow of a liquid electrolyte medium. Since the electrolyte density is greater when the sulfuric acid concentration is higher, the liquid will tend to circulate by convection. Therefore, a liquid-medium cell tends to rapidly discharge and rapidly charge more efficiently than an otherwise similar gel cell.

Measuring the charge level

 
A hydrometer can be used to test the specific gravity of each cell as a measure of its state of charge.

Because the electrolyte takes part in the charge-discharge reaction, this battery has one major advantage over other chemistries: It is relatively simple to determine the state of charge by merely measuring the specific gravity of the electrolyte; the specific gravity falls as the battery discharges. Some battery designs include a simple hydrometer using colored floating balls of differing density. When used in diesel-electric submarines, the specific gravity was regularly measured and written on a blackboard in the control room to indicate how much longer the boat could remain submerged.[14]

The battery's open-circuit voltage can also be used to gauge the state of charge.[15] If the connections to the individual cells are accessible, then the state of charge of each cell can be determined which can provide a guide as to the state of health of the battery as a whole, otherwise the overall battery voltage may be assessed.

Voltages for common usage

IUoU battery charging is a three-stage charging procedure for lead–acid batteries. A lead–acid battery's nominal voltage is 2.2 V for each cell. For a single cell, the voltage can range from 1.8  V loaded at full discharge, to 2.10  V in an open circuit at full charge.

Float voltage varies depending on battery type (i.e. flooded cells, gelled electrolyte, absorbed glass mat), and ranges from 1.8 V to 2.27 V. Equalization voltage, and charging voltage for sulfated cells, can range from 2.67 V to almost 3 V[16] (only until a charge current is flowing).[17][18] Specific values for a given battery depend on the design and manufacturer recommendations, and are usually given at a baseline temperature of 20 °C (68 °F), requiring adjustment for ambient conditions. IEEE Standard 485-2020 (first published in 1997) is the industry's recommended practice for sizing Lead-Acid batteries in stationary applications. [19]

Construction

Plates

 
Internal view of a small lead–acid battery from an electric-start equipped motorcycle

The lead–acid cell can be demonstrated using sheet lead plates for the two electrodes. However, such a construction produces only around one ampere for roughly postcard-sized plates, and for only a few minutes.

Gaston Planté found a way to provide a much larger effective surface area. In Planté's design, the positive and negative plates were formed of two spirals of lead foil, separated with a sheet of cloth and coiled up. The cells initially had low capacity, so a slow process of "forming" was required to corrode the lead foils, creating lead dioxide on the plates and roughening them to increase surface area. Initially, this process used electricity from primary batteries; when generators became available after 1870, the cost of producing batteries greatly declined.[8] Planté plates are still used in some stationary applications, where the plates are mechanically grooved to increase their surface area.

In 1880, Camille Alphonse Faure patented a method of coating a lead grid (which serves as the current conductor) with a paste of lead oxides, sulfuric acid, and water, followed by curing phase in which the plates were exposed to gentle heat in a high-humidity environment. The curing process changed the paste into a mixture of lead sulfates which adhered to the lead plate. Then, during the battery's initial charge (called "formation") the cured paste on the plates was converted into electrochemically active material (the "active mass"). Faure's process significantly reduced the time and cost to manufacture lead–acid batteries, and gave a substantial increase in capacity compared with Planté's battery.[20] Faure's method is still in use today, with only incremental improvements to paste composition, curing (which is still done with steam, but is now a very tightly controlled process), and structure and composition of the grid to which the paste is applied.

The grid developed by Faure was of pure lead with connecting rods of lead at right angles. In contrast, present-day grids are structured for improved mechanical strength and improved current flow. In addition to different grid patterns (ideally, all points on the plate are equidistant from the power conductor), modern-day processes also apply one or two thin fiber-glass mats over the grid to distribute the weight more evenly. And while Faure had used pure lead for his grids, within a year (1881) these had been superseded by lead–antimony (8–12%) alloys to give the structures additional rigidity. However, high-antimony grids have higher hydrogen evolution (which also accelerates as the battery ages), and thus greater outgassing and higher maintenance costs. These issues were identified by U. B. Thomas and W. E. Haring at Bell Labs in the 1930s and eventually led to the development of lead–calcium grid alloys in 1935 for standby power batteries on the U.S. telephone network. Related research led to the development of lead–selenium grid alloys in Europe a few years later. Both lead–calcium and lead–selenium grid alloys still add antimony, albeit in much smaller quantities than the older high-antimony grids: lead–calcium grids have 4–6% antimony while lead–selenium grids have 1–2%. These metallurgical improvements give the grid more strength, which allows it to carry more weight, i.e. more active material, and so the plates can be thicker, which in turn contributes to battery lifespan since there is more material available to shed before the battery becomes unusable. High-antimony alloy grids are still used in batteries intended for frequent cycling, e.g. in motor-starting applications where frequent expansion/contraction of the plates need to be compensated for, but where outgassing is not significant since charge currents remain low. Since the 1950s, batteries designed for infrequent cycling applications (e.g., standby power batteries) increasingly have lead–calcium or lead–selenium alloy grids since these have less hydrogen evolution and thus lower maintenance overhead. Lead–calcium alloy grids are cheaper to manufacture (the cells thus have lower up-front costs), and have a lower self-discharge rate, and lower watering requirements, but have slightly poorer conductivity, are mechanically weaker (and thus require more antimony to compensate), and are more strongly subject to corrosion (and thus a shorter lifespan) than cells with lead–selenium alloy grids.

The open-circuit effect is a dramatic loss of battery cycle life which was observed when calcium was substituted for antimony. It is also known as the antimony free effect.[21]

Modern approach

Modern-day paste contains carbon black, blanc fixe (barium sulfate) and lignosulfonate. The blanc fixe acts as a seed crystal for the lead–to–lead sulfate reaction. The blanc fixe must be fully dispersed in the paste in order for it to be effective. The lignosulfonate prevents the negative plate from forming a solid mass during the discharge cycle, instead enabling the formation of long needle–like dendrites. The long crystals have more surface area and are easily converted back to the original state on charging. Carbon black counteracts the effect of inhibiting formation caused by the lignosulfonates. Sulfonated naphthalene condensate dispersant is a more effective expander than lignosulfonate and speeds up formation. This dispersant improves the dispersion of barium sulfate in the paste, reduces hydroset time, produces a more breakage-resistant plate, reduces fine lead particles, and thereby improves handling and pasting characteristics. It extends battery life by increasing end-of-charge voltage. Sulfonated naphthalene requires about one-third to one-half the amount of lignosulfonate and is stable to higher temperatures.[22]

Once dry, the plates are stacked with suitable separators and inserted in a cell container. The alternate plates then constitute alternating positive and negative electrodes, and within the cell are later connected to one another (negative to negative, positive to positive) in parallel. The separators inhibit the plates from touching each other, which would otherwise constitute a short circuit. In flooded and gel cells, the separators are insulating rails or studs, formerly of glass or ceramic, and now of plastic. In AGM cells, the separator is the glass mat itself, and the rack of plates with separators are squeezed together before insertion into the cell; once in the cell, the glass mats expand slightly, effectively locking the plates in place. In multi-cell batteries, the cells are then connected to one another in series, either through connectors through the cell walls, or by a bridge over the cell walls. All intra-cell and inter-cell connections are of the same lead alloy as that used in the grids. This is necessary to prevent galvanic corrosion.

Deep-cycle batteries have a different geometry for their positive electrodes. The positive electrode is not a flat plate but a row of lead–oxide cylinders or tubes strung side by side, so their geometry is called tubular or cylindrical. The advantage of this is an increased surface area in contact with the electrolyte, with higher discharge and charge currents than a flat-plate cell of the same volume and depth-of-charge. Tubular-electrode cells have a higher power density than flat-plate cells. This makes tubular/cylindrical geometry plates especially suitable for high-current applications with weight or space limitations, such as for forklifts or for starting marine diesel engines. However, because tubes/cylinders have less active material in the same volume, they also have a lower energy density than flat-plate cells. And, less active material at the electrode also means they have less material available to shed before the cell becomes unusable. Tubular/cylindrical electrodes are also more complicated to manufacture uniformly, which tends to make them more expensive than flat-plate cells. These trade-offs limit the range of applications in which tubular/cylindrical batteries are meaningful to situations where there is insufficient space to install higher capacity (and thus larger) flat-plate units.

About 60% of the weight of an automotive-type lead–acid battery rated around 60 A·h is lead or internal parts made of lead; the balance is electrolyte, separators, and the case.[8] For example, there are approximately 8.7 kg (19 lb) of lead in a typical 14.5-kg (32 lb) battery.

Separators

Separators between the positive and negative plates prevent short circuit through physical contact, mostly through dendrites ("treeing"), but also through shedding of the active material. Separators allow the flow of ions between the plates of an electrochemical cell to form a closed circuit. Wood, rubber, glass fiber mat, cellulose, and PVC or polyethylene plastic have been used to make separators. Wood was the original choice, but it deteriorates in the acid electrolyte.

An effective separator must possess a number of mechanical properties; such as permeability, porosity, pore size distribution, specific surface area, mechanical design and strength, electrical resistance, ionic conductivity, and chemical compatibility with the electrolyte. In service, the separator must have good resistance to acid and oxidation. The area of the separator must be a little larger than the area of the plates to prevent material shorting between the plates. The separators must remain stable over the battery's operating temperature range.

Absorbent Glass Mat (AGM)

In the absorbent glass mat design, or AGM for short, the separators between the plates are replaced by a glass fibre mat soaked in electrolyte. There is only enough electrolyte in the mat to keep it wet, and if the battery is punctured the electrolyte will not flow out of the mats. Principally the purpose of replacing liquid electrolyte in a flooded battery with a semi-saturated fiberglass mat is to substantially increase the gas transport through the separator; hydrogen or oxygen gas produced during overcharge or charge (if the charge current is excessive) is able to freely pass through the glass mat and reduce or oxidize the opposing plate respectively. In a flooded cell the bubbles of gas float to the top of the battery and are lost to the atmosphere. This mechanism for the gas produced to recombine and the additional benefit of a semi-saturated cell providing no substantial leakage of electrolyte upon physical puncture of the battery case allows the battery to be completely sealed, which makes them useful in portable devices and similar roles. Additionally the battery can be installed in any orientation, though if it is installed upside down then acid may be blown out through the overpressure vent.

To reduce the water loss rate calcium is alloyed with the plates; however, gas build-up remains a problem when the battery is deeply or rapidly charged or discharged. To prevent over-pressurization of the battery casing, AGM batteries include a one-way blow-off valve, and are often known as "valve-regulated lead–acid", or VRLA, designs.

Another advantage to the AGM design is that the electrolyte becomes the separator material, and mechanically strong. This allows the plate stack to be compressed together in the battery shell, slightly increasing energy density compared to liquid or gel versions. AGM batteries often show a characteristic "bulging" in their shells when built in common rectangular shapes, due to the expansion of the positive plates.

The mat also prevents the vertical motion of the electrolyte within the battery. When a normal wet cell is stored in a discharged state, the heavier acid molecules tend to settle to the bottom of the battery, causing the electrolyte to stratify. When the battery is then used, the majority of the current flows only in this area, and the bottom of the plates tends to wear out rapidly. This is one of the reasons a conventional car battery can be ruined by leaving it stored for a long period and then used and recharged. The mat significantly prevents this stratification, eliminating the need to periodically shake the batteries, boil them, or run an "equalization charge" through them to mix the electrolyte. Stratification also causes the upper layers of the battery to become almost completely water, which can freeze in cold weather, AGMs are significantly less susceptible to damage due to low-temperature use.

While AGM cells do not permit watering (typically it is impossible to add water without drilling a hole in the battery), their recombination process is fundamentally limited by the usual chemical processes. Hydrogen gas will even diffuse right through the plastic case itself. Some have found that it is profitable to add water to an AGM battery, but this must be done slowly to allow for the water to mix via diffusion throughout the battery. When a lead–acid battery loses water, its acid concentration increases, increasing the corrosion rate of the plates significantly. AGM cells already have a high acid content in an attempt to lower the water loss rate and increase standby voltage, and this brings about shorter life compared to a lead–antimony flooded battery. If the open circuit voltage of AGM cells is significantly higher than 2.093 volts, or 12.56 V for a 12 V battery, then it has a higher acid content than a flooded cell; while this is normal for an AGM battery, it is not desirable for long life.

AGM cells that are intentionally or accidentally overcharged will show a higher open circuit voltage according to the water lost (and acid concentration increased). One amp-hour of overcharge will electrolyse 0.335 grams of water per cell; some of this liberated hydrogen and oxygen will recombine, but not all of it.

Gelled electrolytes

During the 1970s, researchers developed the sealed version or gel battery, which mixes a silica gelling agent into the electrolyte (silica gel- based lead–acid batteries used in portable radios from the early 1930s were not fully sealed). This converts the formerly liquid interior of the cells into a semi-stiff paste, providing many of the same advantages of the AGM. Such designs are even less susceptible to evaporation and are often used in situations where little or no periodic maintenance is possible. Gel cells also have lower freezing and higher boiling points than the liquid electrolytes used in conventional wet cells and AGMs, which makes them suitable for use in extreme conditions.

The only downside to the gel design is that the gel prevents rapid motion of the ions in the electrolyte, which reduces carrier mobility and thus surge current capability. For this reason, gel cells are most commonly found in energy storage applications like off-grid systems.

"Maintenance free", "sealed", and "VRLA"(valve regulated lead acid)

Both gel and AGM designs are sealed, do not require watering, can be used in any orientation, and use a valve for gas blowoff. For this reason, both designs can be called maintenance free, sealed and VRLA. However, it is quite common to find resources stating that these terms refer to one or another of these designs, specifically.

In a valve regulated lead–acid (VRLA) battery, the hydrogen and oxygen produced in the cells largely recombine into water. Leakage is minimal, although some electrolyte still escapes if the recombination cannot keep up with gas evolution. Since VRLA batteries do not require (and make impossible) regular checking of the electrolyte level, they have been called maintenance free batteries. However, this is somewhat of a misnomer. VRLA cells do require maintenance. As electrolyte is lost, VRLA cells "dry-out" and lose capacity. This can be detected by taking regular internal resistance, conductance, or impedance measurements. Regular testing reveals whether more involved testing and maintenance is required. Recent maintenance procedures have been developed allowing "rehydration", often restoring significant amounts of lost capacity.

VRLA types became popular on motorcycles around 1983,[23] because the acid electrolyte is absorbed into the separator, so it cannot spill.[24] The separator also helps them better withstand vibration. They are also popular in stationary applications such as telecommunications sites, due to their small footprint and installation flexibility.[25]

Applications

Most of the world's lead–acid batteries are automobile starting, lighting, and ignition (SLI) batteries, with an estimated 320 million units shipped in 1999.[8] In 1992 about 3 million tons of lead were used in the manufacture of batteries.

Wet cell stand-by (stationary) batteries designed for deep discharge are commonly used in large backup power supplies for telephone and computer centres, grid energy storage, and off-grid household electric power systems.[26] Lead–acid batteries are used in emergency lighting and to power sump pumps in case of power failure.

Traction (propulsion) batteries are used in golf carts and other battery electric vehicles. Large lead–acid batteries are also used to power the electric motors in diesel-electric (conventional) submarines when submerged, and are used as emergency power on nuclear submarines as well. Valve-regulated lead–acid batteries cannot spill their electrolyte. They are used in back-up power supplies for alarm and smaller computer systems (particularly in uninterruptible power supplies; UPS) and for electric scooters, electric wheelchairs, electrified bicycles, marine applications, battery electric vehicles or micro hybrid vehicles, and motorcycles. Many electric forklifts use lead–acid batteries, where the weight is used as part of a counterweight. Lead–acid batteries were used to supply the filament (heater) voltage, with 2 V common in early vacuum tube (valve) radio receivers.

Portable batteries for miners' cap lamps headlamps typically have two or three cells.[27]

Cycles

Starting batteries

Lead–acid batteries designed for starting automotive engines are not designed for deep discharge. They have a large number of thin plates designed for maximum surface area, and therefore maximum current output, which can easily be damaged by deep discharge. Repeated deep discharges will result in capacity loss and ultimately in premature failure, as the electrodes disintegrate due to mechanical stresses that arise from cycling. Starting batteries kept on a continuous float charge will suffer corrosion of the electrodes which will also result in premature failure. Starting batteries should therefore be kept open circuit but charged regularly (at least once every two weeks) to prevent sulfation.

Starting batteries are of lighter weight than deep-cycle batteries of the same size, because the thinner and lighter cell plates do not extend all the way to the bottom of the battery case. This allows loose disintegrated material to fall off the plates and collect at the bottom of the cell, prolonging the service life of the battery. If this loose debris rises enough it may touch the bottom of the plates and cause failure of a cell, resulting in loss of battery voltage and capacity.

Deep-cycle batteries

Specially designed deep-cycle cells are much less susceptible to degradation due to cycling, and are required for applications where the batteries are regularly discharged, such as photovoltaic systems, electric vehicles (forklift, golf cart, electric cars, and others) and uninterruptible power supplies. These batteries have thicker plates that can deliver less peak current, but can withstand frequent discharging.[28]

Some batteries are designed as a compromise between starter (high-current) and deep cycle. They are able to be discharged to a greater degree than automotive batteries, but less so than deep-cycle batteries. They may be referred to as "marine/motorhome" batteries, or "leisure batteries".

Fast and slow charge and discharge

 
Charge current needs to match the ability of the battery to absorb the energy. Using too large a charge current on a small battery can lead to boiling and venting of the electrolyte. In this image a VRLA battery case has ballooned due to the high gas pressure developed during overcharge.

The capacity of a lead–acid battery is not a fixed quantity but varies according to how quickly it is discharged. The empirical relationship between discharge rate and capacity is known as Peukert's law.

When a battery is charged or discharged, only the reacting chemicals, which are at the interface between the electrodes and the electrolyte, are initially affected. With time, the charge stored in the chemicals at the interface, often called "interface charge" or "surface charge", spreads by diffusion of these chemicals throughout the volume of the active material.

Consider a battery that has been completely discharged (such as occurs when leaving the car lights on overnight, a current draw of about 6 amps). If it then is given a fast charge for only a few minutes, the battery plates charge only near the interface between the plates and the electrolyte. In this case the battery voltage might rise to a value near that of the charger voltage; this causes the charging current to decrease significantly. After a few hours this interface charge will spread to the volume of the electrode and electrolyte; this leads to an interface charge so low that it may be insufficient to start the car.[29] As long as the charging voltage stays below the gassing voltage (about 14.4 volts in a normal lead–acid battery), battery damage is unlikely, and in time the battery should return to a nominally charged state.

Sulfation and desulfation

 
Sulfated plates from a 12-V 5-Ah battery

Lead–acid batteries lose the ability to accept a charge when discharged for too long due to sulfation, the crystallization of lead sulfate.[30] They generate electricity through a double sulfate chemical reaction. Lead and lead dioxide, the active materials on the battery's plates, react with sulfuric acid in the electrolyte to form lead sulfate. The lead sulfate first forms in a finely divided, amorphous state and easily reverts to lead, lead dioxide, and sulfuric acid when the battery recharges. As batteries cycle through numerous discharges and charges, some lead sulfate does not recombine into electrolyte and slowly converts into a stable crystalline form that no longer dissolves on recharging. Thus, not all the lead is returned to the battery plates, and the amount of usable active material necessary for electricity generation declines over time.

Sulfation occurs in lead–acid batteries when they are subjected to insufficient charging during normal operation. It impedes recharging; sulfate deposits ultimately expand, cracking the plates and destroying the battery. Eventually, so much of the battery plate area is unable to supply current that the battery capacity is greatly reduced. In addition, the sulfate portion (of the lead sulfate) is not returned to the electrolyte as sulfuric acid. It is believed that large crystals physically block the electrolyte from entering the pores of the plates. A white coating on the plates may be visible in batteries with clear cases or after dismantling the battery. Batteries that are sulfated show a high internal resistance and can deliver only a small fraction of normal discharge current. Sulfation also affects the charging cycle, resulting in longer charging times, less efficient and incomplete charging, and higher battery temperatures.

SLI batteries (starting, lighting, ignition; e.g., car batteries) suffer the most deterioration because vehicles normally stand unused for relatively long periods of time. Deep-cycle and motive power batteries are subjected to regular controlled overcharging, eventually failing due to corrosion of the positive plate grids rather than sulfation.

Sulfation can be avoided if the battery is fully recharged immediately after a discharge cycle.[31] There are no known independently verified ways to reverse sulfation.[8][32] There are commercial products claiming to achieve desulfation through various techniques such as pulse charging, but there are no peer-reviewed publications verifying their claims. Sulfation prevention remains the best course of action, by periodically fully charging the lead–acid batteries.

Stratification

A typical lead–acid battery contains a mixture with varying concentrations of water and acid. Sulfuric acid has a higher density than water, which causes the acid formed at the plates during charging to flow downward and collect at the bottom of the battery. Eventually the mixture will again reach uniform composition by diffusion, but this is a very slow process. Repeated cycles of partial charging and discharging will increase stratification of the electrolyte, reducing the capacity and performance of the battery because the lack of acid on top limits plate activation. The stratification also promotes corrosion on the upper half of the plates and sulfation at the bottom.[33]

Periodic overcharging creates gaseous reaction products at the plate, causing convection currents which mix the electrolyte and resolve the stratification. Mechanical stirring of the electrolyte would have the same effect. Batteries in moving vehicles are also subject to sloshing and splashing in the cells, as the vehicle accelerates, brakes, and turns.

Risk of explosion

 
Car lead–acid battery after explosion showing brittle fracture in casing ends

Excessive charging causes electrolysis, emitting hydrogen and oxygen. This process is known as "gassing". Wet cells have open vents to release any gas produced, and VRLA batteries rely on valves fitted to each cell. Catalytic caps are available for flooded cells to recombine hydrogen and oxygen. A VRLA cell normally recombines any hydrogen and oxygen produced inside the cell, but malfunction or overheating may cause gas to build up. If this happens (for example, on overcharging) the valve vents the gas and normalizes the pressure, producing a characteristic acid smell. However, valves can fail, such as if dirt and debris accumulate, allowing pressure to build up.

Accumulated hydrogen and oxygen sometimes ignite in an internal explosion. The force of the explosion can cause the battery's casing to burst, or cause its top to fly off, spraying acid and casing fragments. An explosion in one cell may ignite any combustible gas mixture in the remaining cells. Similarly, in a poorly ventilated area, connecting or disconnecting a closed circuit (such as a load or a charger) to the battery terminals can also cause sparks and an explosion, if any gas was vented from the cells.

Individual cells within a battery can also short circuit, causing an explosion.

The cells of VRLA batteries typically swell when the internal pressure rises, so giving a warning to users and mechanics. The deformation varies from cell to cell, and is greatest at the ends where the walls are unsupported by other cells. Such over-pressurized batteries should be carefully isolated and discarded. Personnel working near batteries at risk for explosion should protect their eyes and exposed skin from burns due to spraying acid and fire by wearing a face shield, overalls, and gloves. Using goggles instead of a face shield sacrifices safety by leaving the face exposed to possible flying acid, case or battery fragments, and heat from a potential explosion.

Environment

Environmental concerns

According to a 2003 report entitled "Getting the Lead Out", by Environmental Defense and the Ecology Center of Ann Arbor, Michigan, the batteries of vehicles on the road contained an estimated 2,600,000 metric tons (2,600,000 long tons; 2,900,000 short tons) of lead. Some lead compounds are extremely toxic. Long-term exposure to even tiny amounts of these compounds can cause brain and kidney damage, hearing impairment, and learning problems in children.[34] The auto industry uses over 1,000,000 metric tons (980,000 long tons; 1,100,000 short tons) of lead every year, with 90% going to conventional lead–acid vehicle batteries. While lead recycling is a well-established industry, more than 40,000 metric tons (39,000 long tons; 44,000 short tons) ends up in landfills every year. According to the federal Toxic Release Inventory, another 70,000 metric tons (69,000 long tons; 77,000 short tons) are released in the lead mining and manufacturing process.[35]

Attempts are being made to develop alternatives (particularly for automotive use) because of concerns about the environmental consequences of improper disposal and of lead smelting operations, among other reasons. Alternatives are unlikely to displace them for applications such as engine starting or backup power systems, since the batteries, although heavy, are low-cost.

Recycling

 
A worker recycling molten lead in a battery recycling facility

According to the Battery Council, an industry group, lead–acid battery recycling is one of the most successful recycling programs in the world. In the United States 99% of all battery lead was recycled between 2014 and 2018.[36][dubious ][better source needed] However, documents of the U.S. Environmental Protection Administration, since 1982, have indicated rates varying between 60% and 95%.[37][38]

Lead is highly toxic to humans, and recycling it can result in pollution and contamination of people resulting in numerous and lasting health problems.[39][40] One ranking identifies lead–acid battery recycling as the world's most deadly industrial process, in terms of disability-adjusted life years lost—resulting in 2,000,000 to 4,800,000 estimated years of individual human life lost, globally.[41]

Lead–acid battery-recycling sites, themselves, have become a source of lead pollution, and by 1992, the EPA had selected 29 such sites for its Superfund clean-up, with 22 on its National Priority List.[38]

An effective pollution control system is a necessity to prevent lead emission. Continuous improvement in battery recycling plants and furnace designs is required to keep pace with emission standards for lead smelters.

Additives

Chemical additives have been used ever since the lead–acid battery became a commercial item, to reduce lead sulfate build-up on plates and improve battery condition when added to the electrolyte of a vented lead–acid battery. Such treatments are rarely, if ever, effective.[42]

Two compounds used for such purposes are Epsom salts and EDTA. Epsom salts reduce the internal resistance in a weak or damaged battery and may allow a small amount of extended life. EDTA can be used to dissolve the sulfate deposits of heavily discharged plates. However, the dissolved material is then no longer available to participate in the normal charge-discharge cycle, so a battery temporarily revived with EDTA will have a reduced life expectancy. Residual EDTA in the lead–acid cell forms organic acids which will accelerate corrosion of the lead plates and internal connectors.

The active materials change physical form during charge/discharge, resulting in growth and distortion of the electrodes, and shedding of electrodes into the electrolyte. Once the active material has fallen out of the plates, it cannot be restored into position by any chemical treatment. Similarly, internal physical problems such as cracked plates, corroded connectors, or damaged separators cannot be restored chemically.

Corrosion problems

Corrosion of the external metal parts of the lead–acid battery results from a chemical reaction of the battery terminals, plugs, and connectors.

Corrosion on the positive terminal is caused by electrolysis, due to a mismatch of metal alloys used in the manufacture of the battery terminal and cable connector. White corrosion is usually lead or zinc sulfate crystals. Aluminum connectors corrode to aluminum sulfate. Copper connectors produce blue and white corrosion crystals. Corrosion of a battery's terminals can be reduced by coating the terminals with petroleum jelly or a commercially available product made for the purpose.[43]

If the battery is overfilled with water and electrolyte, thermal expansion can force some of the liquid out of the battery vents onto the top of the battery. This solution can then react with the lead and other metals in the battery connector and cause corrosion.

The electrolyte can seep from the plastic-to-lead seal where the battery terminals penetrate the plastic case.

Acid fumes that vaporize through the vent caps, often caused by overcharging, and insufficient battery box ventilation can allow the sulfuric acid fumes to build up and react with the exposed metals.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b May, Geoffrey J.; Davidson, Alistair; Monahov, Boris (February 2018). "Lead batteries for utility energy storage: A review". Journal of Energy Storage. 15: 145–157. doi:10.1016/j.est.2017.11.008.
  2. ^ (PDF). Trojan Battery Company. 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-06-04. Retrieved 2014-01-09.
  3. ^ Technical Manual: Sealed Lead Acid Batteries (PDF), Power-Sonic Corporation, 2018-12-17, p. 19, retrieved 2014-01-09
  4. ^ Cowie, Ivan (13 January 2014). "All About Batteries, Part 3: Lead–acid Batteries". UBM Canon. Retrieved 3 November 2015.
  5. ^ PS and PSG General Purpose Battery Specifications
  6. ^ PS Series - VRLA, AGM Battery, Valve Regulated
  7. ^ Crompton, Thomas Roy (2000). Battery Reference Book (3rd ed.). Newnes. p. 1/10. ISBN 07506-4625-X.
  8. ^ a b c d e Linden, David; Reddy, Thomas B., eds. (2002). Handbook Of Batteries (3rd ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 23.5. ISBN 978-0-07-135978-8.
  9. ^ "Lead Acid Battery History".
  10. ^ "Gaston Planté (1834-1889)", Corrosion-doctors.org; Last accessed on Jan 3, 2007,
  11. ^ Camm, Frederick James. "Lead–acid battery". Wireless Constructor's Encyclopaedia (third ed.).
  12. ^ Schirber, Michael (2011-01-14). "Focus: Relativity Powers Your Car Battery". Physics. American Physical Society. 27. Retrieved 2019-12-25.
  13. ^ "Liquid Tin Bismuth Battery for Grid-Scale Energy Storage". InternationalTin.org. International Tin Association. 2018-01-09. Retrieved 2019-12-25.
  14. ^ For one example account of the importance of battery specific gravity to submariners, see Ruhe, William J. (1996). War in the Boats: My World War II Submarine Battles. Brassey's. p. 112. ISBN 978-1-57488-028-1.
  15. ^ . WindSun.com. sec. "Battery voltages". Archived from the original on 2010-07-22. Retrieved 2010-06-30.
  16. ^ (PDF). Edition 6. GNB Industrial Power, Exide Technologies. February 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 18, 2020.
  17. ^ "Recommended voltage settings for 3 phase charging of flooded lead acid batteries.", Rolls Battery, Retrieved on 17 April 2015.
  18. ^ Moderne Akkumulatoren, Page 55, ISBN 3-939359-11-4
  19. ^ "IEEE 485-2020 Standard".
  20. ^ Dell, Ronald; David Anthony; James Rand (2001). Understanding Batteries. Royal Society of Chemistry. ISBN 978-0-85404-605-8.
  21. ^ . www.labatscience.com. Archived from the original on 2008-08-20.
  22. ^ United States Patent 5,948,567
  23. ^ Sudhan S. Misra (25 May 2007). "Advances in VRLAnext term battery technology for telecommunications". Journal of Power Sources. 168 (1): 40–8. Bibcode:2007JPS...168...40M. doi:10.1016/j.jpowsour.2006.11.005.[dead link]
  24. ^ Paper on recent VRLA developments from the Japanese Technical Center (SLI), Yuasa Corporation
  25. ^ EU Aviation News website 2009-08-13 at the Wayback Machine tells about history, usage and recent developments for VRLA.
  26. ^ Introduction to Deep-Cycle Batteries in RE Systems
  27. ^ Cowlishaw, M.F. (December 1974). "The Characteristics and Use of Lead–acid Cap Lamps" (PDF). Trans. British Cave Research Association. 1 (4): 199–214.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on 2010-07-22. Retrieved 2006-07-23.
  29. ^ Saslow, Wayne M. (2002). Electricity, Magnetism, and Light. Toronto: Thomson Learning. pp. 302–4. ISBN 978-0-12-619455-5.
  30. ^ J W Simms. The Boy Electrician. George G Haerrap & Co. p. 65.
  31. ^ Equalize charging can prevent sulfation if performed prior to the lead sulfate forming crystals. Broussely, Michel; Pistoia, Gianfranco, eds. (2007). Industrial applications of batteries: from cars to aerospace and energy storage. Elsevier. pp. 502–3. ISBN 978-0-444-52160-6.
  32. ^ "Sulfation Remedies Demystified". Batteryvitamin.net. Retrieved August 29, 2020.
  33. ^ Henry A. Catherino; Fred F. Feres; Francisco Trinidad (2004). "Sulfation in lead–acid batteries". Journal of Power Sources. 129 (1): 113–120. Bibcode:2004JPS...129..113C. doi:10.1016/j.jpowsour.2003.11.003.
  34. ^ "2.3 LEAD DOSE-RESPONSE RELATIONSHIPS" (PDF), TOXICOLOGICAL PROFILE FOR LEAD, USA: CDC Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, August 2007, p. 31, retrieved 2013-09-26, These data suggest that certain subtle neurobehavioral effects in children may occur at very low PbBs. (PbB means lead blood level)
  35. ^ DeCicco, John M.; Kliesch, James (February 2001). ACEEE's Green Book: The Environmental Guide to Cars and Trucks. ISBN 978-0-918249-45-6.
  36. ^ "Battery Council International" (PDF). Battery Council. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  37. ^ "Conclusions" in The Impacts of Lead Industry Economics and Hazardous Waste Regulations on Lead-Acid Battery Recycling: Revision and Update,, September 1987, prepared for the Office of Policy Analysis, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, by Putnam, Hayes & Bartlett, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts, (also at nepis.epa.gov) retrieved May 15, 2021
  38. ^ a b "Engineering Bulletin: Selection of Control Technologies for Remediation of Lead Battery Recycling Sites", September 1992, Superfund: EPA/540/S-95/011, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, (also at: nepis.epa.gov) retrieved May 15, 2021
  39. ^ Ericson, Bret; Howard Hu; Emily Nash; Greg Ferraro; Julia Sinitsky; Mark Patrick Taylor: "Blood lead levels in low-income and middle-income countries: a systematic review,", March 2021 The Lancet Planetary Health, of The Lancet, DOI:https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(20)30278-3•, as cited in "Pure Earth, USC and Macquarie University Publish Landmark Lead Study in The Lancet Planetary Health Journal," The Pollution Blog, Pure Earth, retrieved May 15, 2021
  40. ^ Pearce, Fred: "Getting the Lead Out: Why Battery Recycling Is a Global Health Hazard," November 2, 2020, Yale Environment 360, Yale School of the Environment, Yale University, retrieved May 15, 2021
  41. ^ Ballantyne, Andrew D.; Hallett, Jason P.; Riley, D. Jason; Shah, Nilay; Payne, David J. (2018). "Lead acid battery recycling for the twenty-first century". Royal Society Open Science. 5 (5): 171368. Bibcode:2018RSOS....571368B. doi:10.1098/rsos.171368. PMC 5990833. PMID 29892351.
  42. ^ http://museum.nist.gov/exhibits/adx2/partii.htm 2016-03-14 at the Wayback Machine A dispute on battery additives when Dr. Vinal of the National Bureau of Standards reported on this for the National Better Business Bureau.
  43. ^ Horst Bauer, ed. (1996). Automotive Handbook (4th ed.). Robert Bosch. p. 805. ISBN 0-8376-0333-1.

External links

General

  • magnalabs.com, battery plate sulfation
  • reuk.co.uk, battery desulfation
  • reuk.co.uk, lead acid batteries
  • cbcdesign.co.uk, DC supply (April 2002)
  • comcast.net, sme technical details on lead acid batteries
  • btterycouncil.org (BCI), lead–acid battery manufacturers' trade organization.
  • batteryfaq.org, car and deep-cycle battery FAQ
  • atsdr.cdc.gov, lead (Pb) toxicity: key concepts | ATSDR - environmental medicine & environmental health education - CSEM case studies in environmental medicine (CSEM), agency for toxic substances and disease registry
  • alton-moore.net, lead acid battery desulfator (Home Power #77 June/July 2000)]

lead, acid, battery, lead, acid, battery, type, rechargeable, battery, first, invented, 1859, french, physicist, gaston, planté, first, type, rechargeable, battery, ever, created, compared, modern, rechargeable, batteries, lead, acid, batteries, have, relative. The lead acid battery is a type of rechargeable battery first invented in 1859 by French physicist Gaston Plante It is the first type of rechargeable battery ever created Compared to modern rechargeable batteries lead acid batteries have relatively low energy density Despite this their ability to supply high surge currents means that the cells have a relatively large power to weight ratio These features along with their low cost make them attractive for use in motor vehicles to provide the high current required by starter motors Lead acid batteries suffer from relatively short cycle lifespan usually less than 500 deep cycles and overall lifespan due to the double sulfation in the discharged state as well as slow or long charging time Lead acid battery12v lead acid car batterySpecific energy35 40 Wh kg 1 Energy density80 90 Wh L 1 Specific power180 W kg 2 Charge discharge efficiency50 95 3 Energy consumer price7 sld to 18 fld Wh US 4 Self discharge rate3 20 month 5 Cycle durability lt 350 cycles 6 Nominal cell voltage2 1 V 7 Charge temperature intervalMin 35 C max 45 CAs they are inexpensive compared to newer technologies lead acid batteries are widely used even when surge current is not important and other designs could provide higher energy densities In 1999 lead acid battery sales accounted for 40 50 of the value from batteries sold worldwide excluding China and Russia equivalent to a manufacturing market value of about US 15 billion 8 Large format lead acid designs are widely used for storage in backup power supplies in cell phone towers high availability emergency power systems like hospitals and stand alone power systems For these roles modified versions of the standard cell may be used to improve storage times and reduce maintenance requirements Gel cells and absorbed glass mat batteries are common in these roles collectively known as VRLA valve regulated lead acid batteries In the charged state the chemical energy of the battery is stored in the potential difference between metallic lead at the negative side and PbO2 on the positive side Contents 1 History 2 Electrochemistry 2 1 Discharge 2 2 Charging 2 3 Effect of charge level on freezing point 2 4 Ion motion 3 Measuring the charge level 4 Voltages for common usage 5 Construction 5 1 Plates 5 2 Modern approach 5 3 Separators 5 4 Absorbent Glass Mat AGM 5 5 Gelled electrolytes 5 6 Maintenance free sealed and VRLA valve regulated lead acid 6 Applications 7 Cycles 7 1 Starting batteries 7 2 Deep cycle batteries 7 3 Fast and slow charge and discharge 8 Sulfation and desulfation 9 Stratification 10 Risk of explosion 11 Environment 11 1 Environmental concerns 11 2 Recycling 12 Additives 13 Corrosion problems 14 See also 15 References 16 External links 16 1 GeneralHistory EditMain article History of the battery The French scientist Nicolas Gautherot observed in 1801 that wires that had been used for electrolysis experiments would themselves provide a small amount of secondary current after the main battery had been disconnected 9 In 1859 Gaston Plante s lead acid battery was the first battery that could be recharged by passing a reverse current through it Plante s first model consisted of two lead sheets separated by rubber strips and rolled into a spiral 10 His batteries were first used to power the lights in train carriages while stopped at a station In 1881 Camille Alphonse Faure invented an improved version that consisted of a lead grid lattice into which a lead oxide paste was pressed forming a plate This design was easier to mass produce An early manufacturer from 1886 of lead acid batteries was Henri Tudor citation needed Using a gel electrolyte instead of a liquid allows the battery to be used in different positions without leaking Gel electrolyte batteries for any position were first used in the late 1920s and in the 1930s portable suitcase radio sets allowed the cell to be mounted vertically or horizontally but not inverted due to valve design 11 In the 1970s the valve regulated lead acid battery VRLA or sealed was developed including modern absorbed glass mat AGM types allowing operation in any position It was discovered early in 2011 that lead acid batteries did in fact use some aspects of relativity to function and to a lesser degree liquid metal and molten salt batteries such as the Ca Sb and Sn Bi also use this effect 12 13 Electrochemistry EditDischarge Edit Fully discharged two identical lead sulfate plates and diluted sulfuric acid solutionIn the discharged state both the positive and negative plates become lead II sulfate PbSO4 and the electrolyte loses much of its dissolved sulfuric acid and becomes primarily water Negative plate reaction Pb s HSO 4 aq PbSO4 s H aq 2e The release of two conduction electrons gives the lead electrode a negative charge As electrons accumulate they create an electric field which attracts hydrogen ions and repels sulfate ions leading to a double layer near the surface The hydrogen ions screen the charged electrode from the solution which limits further reaction unless charge is allowed to flow out of the electrode Positive plate reaction PbO2 s HSO 4 aq 3H aq 2e PbSO4 s 2H2 O l taking advantage of the metallic conductivity of PbO2 The total reaction can be written asPb s PbO2 s 2H2 SO4 aq 2PbSO4 s 2H2 O l E c e l l 2 05 V displaystyle E cell circ 2 05 text V The net energy released per mole 207 g of Pb s converted to PbSO4 s is ca 400 kJ corresponding to the formation of 36 g of water The sum of the molecular masses of the reactants is 642 6 g mole so theoretically a cell can produce two faradays of charge 192 971 coulombs from 642 6 g of reactants or 83 4 ampere hours per kilogram for a 2 volt cell or 13 9 ampere hours per kilogram for a 12 volt battery This comes to 167 watt hours per kilogram of reactants but in practice a lead acid cell gives only 30 40 watt hours per kilogram of battery due to the mass of the water and other constituent parts Charging Edit Fully recharged Lead dioxide positive plate Lead negative plate and concentrated aqueous sulfuric acid solutionIn the fully charged state the negative plate consists of lead and the positive plate is lead dioxide The electrolyte solution has a higher concentration of aqueous sulfuric acid which stores most of the chemical energy Overcharging with high charging voltages generates oxygen and hydrogen gas by electrolysis of water which bubbles out and is lost The design of some types of lead acid battery allows the electrolyte level to be inspected and topped up with pure water to replace any that has been lost this way Effect of charge level on freezing point Edit Because of freezing point depression the electrolyte is more likely to freeze in a cold environment when the battery has a low charge and a correspondingly low sulfuric acid concentration Ion motion Edit During discharge H produced at the negative plates moves into the electrolyte solution and is then consumed at the positive plates while HSO 4 is consumed at both plates The reverse occurs during the charge This motion can be electrically driven proton flow or Grotthuss mechanism or by diffusion through the medium or by the flow of a liquid electrolyte medium Since the electrolyte density is greater when the sulfuric acid concentration is higher the liquid will tend to circulate by convection Therefore a liquid medium cell tends to rapidly discharge and rapidly charge more efficiently than an otherwise similar gel cell Measuring the charge level Edit A hydrometer can be used to test the specific gravity of each cell as a measure of its state of charge Because the electrolyte takes part in the charge discharge reaction this battery has one major advantage over other chemistries It is relatively simple to determine the state of charge by merely measuring the specific gravity of the electrolyte the specific gravity falls as the battery discharges Some battery designs include a simple hydrometer using colored floating balls of differing density When used in diesel electric submarines the specific gravity was regularly measured and written on a blackboard in the control room to indicate how much longer the boat could remain submerged 14 The battery s open circuit voltage can also be used to gauge the state of charge 15 If the connections to the individual cells are accessible then the state of charge of each cell can be determined which can provide a guide as to the state of health of the battery as a whole otherwise the overall battery voltage may be assessed Voltages for common usage EditIUoU battery charging is a three stage charging procedure for lead acid batteries A lead acid battery s nominal voltage is 2 2 V for each cell For a single cell the voltage can range from 1 8 V loaded at full discharge to 2 10 V in an open circuit at full charge Float voltage varies depending on battery type i e flooded cells gelled electrolyte absorbed glass mat and ranges from 1 8 V to 2 27 V Equalization voltage and charging voltage for sulfated cells can range from 2 67 V to almost 3 V 16 only until a charge current is flowing 17 18 Specific values for a given battery depend on the design and manufacturer recommendations and are usually given at a baseline temperature of 20 C 68 F requiring adjustment for ambient conditions IEEE Standard 485 2020 first published in 1997 is the industry s recommended practice for sizing Lead Acid batteries in stationary applications 19 Construction EditPlates Edit Internal view of a small lead acid battery from an electric start equipped motorcycleThe lead acid cell can be demonstrated using sheet lead plates for the two electrodes However such a construction produces only around one ampere for roughly postcard sized plates and for only a few minutes Gaston Plante found a way to provide a much larger effective surface area In Plante s design the positive and negative plates were formed of two spirals of lead foil separated with a sheet of cloth and coiled up The cells initially had low capacity so a slow process of forming was required to corrode the lead foils creating lead dioxide on the plates and roughening them to increase surface area Initially this process used electricity from primary batteries when generators became available after 1870 the cost of producing batteries greatly declined 8 Plante plates are still used in some stationary applications where the plates are mechanically grooved to increase their surface area In 1880 Camille Alphonse Faure patented a method of coating a lead grid which serves as the current conductor with a paste of lead oxides sulfuric acid and water followed by curing phase in which the plates were exposed to gentle heat in a high humidity environment The curing process changed the paste into a mixture of lead sulfates which adhered to the lead plate Then during the battery s initial charge called formation the cured paste on the plates was converted into electrochemically active material the active mass Faure s process significantly reduced the time and cost to manufacture lead acid batteries and gave a substantial increase in capacity compared with Plante s battery 20 Faure s method is still in use today with only incremental improvements to paste composition curing which is still done with steam but is now a very tightly controlled process and structure and composition of the grid to which the paste is applied The grid developed by Faure was of pure lead with connecting rods of lead at right angles In contrast present day grids are structured for improved mechanical strength and improved current flow In addition to different grid patterns ideally all points on the plate are equidistant from the power conductor modern day processes also apply one or two thin fiber glass mats over the grid to distribute the weight more evenly And while Faure had used pure lead for his grids within a year 1881 these had been superseded by lead antimony 8 12 alloys to give the structures additional rigidity However high antimony grids have higher hydrogen evolution which also accelerates as the battery ages and thus greater outgassing and higher maintenance costs These issues were identified by U B Thomas and W E Haring at Bell Labs in the 1930s and eventually led to the development of lead calcium grid alloys in 1935 for standby power batteries on the U S telephone network Related research led to the development of lead selenium grid alloys in Europe a few years later Both lead calcium and lead selenium grid alloys still add antimony albeit in much smaller quantities than the older high antimony grids lead calcium grids have 4 6 antimony while lead selenium grids have 1 2 These metallurgical improvements give the grid more strength which allows it to carry more weight i e more active material and so the plates can be thicker which in turn contributes to battery lifespan since there is more material available to shed before the battery becomes unusable High antimony alloy grids are still used in batteries intended for frequent cycling e g in motor starting applications where frequent expansion contraction of the plates need to be compensated for but where outgassing is not significant since charge currents remain low Since the 1950s batteries designed for infrequent cycling applications e g standby power batteries increasingly have lead calcium or lead selenium alloy grids since these have less hydrogen evolution and thus lower maintenance overhead Lead calcium alloy grids are cheaper to manufacture the cells thus have lower up front costs and have a lower self discharge rate and lower watering requirements but have slightly poorer conductivity are mechanically weaker and thus require more antimony to compensate and are more strongly subject to corrosion and thus a shorter lifespan than cells with lead selenium alloy grids The open circuit effect is a dramatic loss of battery cycle life which was observed when calcium was substituted for antimony It is also known as the antimony free effect 21 Modern approach Edit Modern day paste contains carbon black blanc fixe barium sulfate and lignosulfonate The blanc fixe acts as a seed crystal for the lead to lead sulfate reaction The blanc fixe must be fully dispersed in the paste in order for it to be effective The lignosulfonate prevents the negative plate from forming a solid mass during the discharge cycle instead enabling the formation of long needle like dendrites The long crystals have more surface area and are easily converted back to the original state on charging Carbon black counteracts the effect of inhibiting formation caused by the lignosulfonates Sulfonated naphthalene condensate dispersant is a more effective expander than lignosulfonate and speeds up formation This dispersant improves the dispersion of barium sulfate in the paste reduces hydroset time produces a more breakage resistant plate reduces fine lead particles and thereby improves handling and pasting characteristics It extends battery life by increasing end of charge voltage Sulfonated naphthalene requires about one third to one half the amount of lignosulfonate and is stable to higher temperatures 22 Once dry the plates are stacked with suitable separators and inserted in a cell container The alternate plates then constitute alternating positive and negative electrodes and within the cell are later connected to one another negative to negative positive to positive in parallel The separators inhibit the plates from touching each other which would otherwise constitute a short circuit In flooded and gel cells the separators are insulating rails or studs formerly of glass or ceramic and now of plastic In AGM cells the separator is the glass mat itself and the rack of plates with separators are squeezed together before insertion into the cell once in the cell the glass mats expand slightly effectively locking the plates in place In multi cell batteries the cells are then connected to one another in series either through connectors through the cell walls or by a bridge over the cell walls All intra cell and inter cell connections are of the same lead alloy as that used in the grids This is necessary to prevent galvanic corrosion Deep cycle batteries have a different geometry for their positive electrodes The positive electrode is not a flat plate but a row of lead oxide cylinders or tubes strung side by side so their geometry is called tubular or cylindrical The advantage of this is an increased surface area in contact with the electrolyte with higher discharge and charge currents than a flat plate cell of the same volume and depth of charge Tubular electrode cells have a higher power density than flat plate cells This makes tubular cylindrical geometry plates especially suitable for high current applications with weight or space limitations such as for forklifts or for starting marine diesel engines However because tubes cylinders have less active material in the same volume they also have a lower energy density than flat plate cells And less active material at the electrode also means they have less material available to shed before the cell becomes unusable Tubular cylindrical electrodes are also more complicated to manufacture uniformly which tends to make them more expensive than flat plate cells These trade offs limit the range of applications in which tubular cylindrical batteries are meaningful to situations where there is insufficient space to install higher capacity and thus larger flat plate units About 60 of the weight of an automotive type lead acid battery rated around 60 A h is lead or internal parts made of lead the balance is electrolyte separators and the case 8 For example there are approximately 8 7 kg 19 lb of lead in a typical 14 5 kg 32 lb battery Separators Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Separators between the positive and negative plates prevent short circuit through physical contact mostly through dendrites treeing but also through shedding of the active material Separators allow the flow of ions between the plates of an electrochemical cell to form a closed circuit Wood rubber glass fiber mat cellulose and PVC or polyethylene plastic have been used to make separators Wood was the original choice but it deteriorates in the acid electrolyte An effective separator must possess a number of mechanical properties such as permeability porosity pore size distribution specific surface area mechanical design and strength electrical resistance ionic conductivity and chemical compatibility with the electrolyte In service the separator must have good resistance to acid and oxidation The area of the separator must be a little larger than the area of the plates to prevent material shorting between the plates The separators must remain stable over the battery s operating temperature range Absorbent Glass Mat AGM Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message In the absorbent glass mat design or AGM for short the separators between the plates are replaced by a glass fibre mat soaked in electrolyte There is only enough electrolyte in the mat to keep it wet and if the battery is punctured the electrolyte will not flow out of the mats Principally the purpose of replacing liquid electrolyte in a flooded battery with a semi saturated fiberglass mat is to substantially increase the gas transport through the separator hydrogen or oxygen gas produced during overcharge or charge if the charge current is excessive is able to freely pass through the glass mat and reduce or oxidize the opposing plate respectively In a flooded cell the bubbles of gas float to the top of the battery and are lost to the atmosphere This mechanism for the gas produced to recombine and the additional benefit of a semi saturated cell providing no substantial leakage of electrolyte upon physical puncture of the battery case allows the battery to be completely sealed which makes them useful in portable devices and similar roles Additionally the battery can be installed in any orientation though if it is installed upside down then acid may be blown out through the overpressure vent To reduce the water loss rate calcium is alloyed with the plates however gas build up remains a problem when the battery is deeply or rapidly charged or discharged To prevent over pressurization of the battery casing AGM batteries include a one way blow off valve and are often known as valve regulated lead acid or VRLA designs Another advantage to the AGM design is that the electrolyte becomes the separator material and mechanically strong This allows the plate stack to be compressed together in the battery shell slightly increasing energy density compared to liquid or gel versions AGM batteries often show a characteristic bulging in their shells when built in common rectangular shapes due to the expansion of the positive plates The mat also prevents the vertical motion of the electrolyte within the battery When a normal wet cell is stored in a discharged state the heavier acid molecules tend to settle to the bottom of the battery causing the electrolyte to stratify When the battery is then used the majority of the current flows only in this area and the bottom of the plates tends to wear out rapidly This is one of the reasons a conventional car battery can be ruined by leaving it stored for a long period and then used and recharged The mat significantly prevents this stratification eliminating the need to periodically shake the batteries boil them or run an equalization charge through them to mix the electrolyte Stratification also causes the upper layers of the battery to become almost completely water which can freeze in cold weather AGMs are significantly less susceptible to damage due to low temperature use While AGM cells do not permit watering typically it is impossible to add water without drilling a hole in the battery their recombination process is fundamentally limited by the usual chemical processes Hydrogen gas will even diffuse right through the plastic case itself Some have found that it is profitable to add water to an AGM battery but this must be done slowly to allow for the water to mix via diffusion throughout the battery When a lead acid battery loses water its acid concentration increases increasing the corrosion rate of the plates significantly AGM cells already have a high acid content in an attempt to lower the water loss rate and increase standby voltage and this brings about shorter life compared to a lead antimony flooded battery If the open circuit voltage of AGM cells is significantly higher than 2 093 volts or 12 56 V for a 12 V battery then it has a higher acid content than a flooded cell while this is normal for an AGM battery it is not desirable for long life AGM cells that are intentionally or accidentally overcharged will show a higher open circuit voltage according to the water lost and acid concentration increased One amp hour of overcharge will electrolyse 0 335 grams of water per cell some of this liberated hydrogen and oxygen will recombine but not all of it Gelled electrolytes Edit Main article VRLA battery Gel battery During the 1970s researchers developed the sealed version or gel battery which mixes a silica gelling agent into the electrolyte silica gel based lead acid batteries used in portable radios from the early 1930s were not fully sealed This converts the formerly liquid interior of the cells into a semi stiff paste providing many of the same advantages of the AGM Such designs are even less susceptible to evaporation and are often used in situations where little or no periodic maintenance is possible Gel cells also have lower freezing and higher boiling points than the liquid electrolytes used in conventional wet cells and AGMs which makes them suitable for use in extreme conditions The only downside to the gel design is that the gel prevents rapid motion of the ions in the electrolyte which reduces carrier mobility and thus surge current capability For this reason gel cells are most commonly found in energy storage applications like off grid systems Maintenance free sealed and VRLA valve regulated lead acid Edit Main article VRLA battery Both gel and AGM designs are sealed do not require watering can be used in any orientation and use a valve for gas blowoff For this reason both designs can be called maintenance free sealed and VRLA However it is quite common to find resources stating that these terms refer to one or another of these designs specifically In a valve regulated lead acid VRLA battery the hydrogen and oxygen produced in the cells largely recombine into water Leakage is minimal although some electrolyte still escapes if the recombination cannot keep up with gas evolution Since VRLA batteries do not require and make impossible regular checking of the electrolyte level they have been called maintenance free batteries However this is somewhat of a misnomer VRLA cells do require maintenance As electrolyte is lost VRLA cells dry out and lose capacity This can be detected by taking regular internal resistance conductance or impedance measurements Regular testing reveals whether more involved testing and maintenance is required Recent maintenance procedures have been developed allowing rehydration often restoring significant amounts of lost capacity VRLA types became popular on motorcycles around 1983 23 because the acid electrolyte is absorbed into the separator so it cannot spill 24 The separator also helps them better withstand vibration They are also popular in stationary applications such as telecommunications sites due to their small footprint and installation flexibility 25 Applications EditMost of the world s lead acid batteries are automobile starting lighting and ignition SLI batteries with an estimated 320 million units shipped in 1999 8 In 1992 about 3 million tons of lead were used in the manufacture of batteries Wet cell stand by stationary batteries designed for deep discharge are commonly used in large backup power supplies for telephone and computer centres grid energy storage and off grid household electric power systems 26 Lead acid batteries are used in emergency lighting and to power sump pumps in case of power failure Traction propulsion batteries are used in golf carts and other battery electric vehicles Large lead acid batteries are also used to power the electric motors in diesel electric conventional submarines when submerged and are used as emergency power on nuclear submarines as well Valve regulated lead acid batteries cannot spill their electrolyte They are used in back up power supplies for alarm and smaller computer systems particularly in uninterruptible power supplies UPS and for electric scooters electric wheelchairs electrified bicycles marine applications battery electric vehicles or micro hybrid vehicles and motorcycles Many electric forklifts use lead acid batteries where the weight is used as part of a counterweight Lead acid batteries were used to supply the filament heater voltage with 2 V common in early vacuum tube valve radio receivers Portable batteries for miners cap lamps headlamps typically have two or three cells 27 Cycles EditStarting batteries Edit Main article Automotive battery Lead acid batteries designed for starting automotive engines are not designed for deep discharge They have a large number of thin plates designed for maximum surface area and therefore maximum current output which can easily be damaged by deep discharge Repeated deep discharges will result in capacity loss and ultimately in premature failure as the electrodes disintegrate due to mechanical stresses that arise from cycling Starting batteries kept on a continuous float charge will suffer corrosion of the electrodes which will also result in premature failure Starting batteries should therefore be kept open circuit but charged regularly at least once every two weeks to prevent sulfation Starting batteries are of lighter weight than deep cycle batteries of the same size because the thinner and lighter cell plates do not extend all the way to the bottom of the battery case This allows loose disintegrated material to fall off the plates and collect at the bottom of the cell prolonging the service life of the battery If this loose debris rises enough it may touch the bottom of the plates and cause failure of a cell resulting in loss of battery voltage and capacity Deep cycle batteries Edit Main article Deep cycle battery Specially designed deep cycle cells are much less susceptible to degradation due to cycling and are required for applications where the batteries are regularly discharged such as photovoltaic systems electric vehicles forklift golf cart electric cars and others and uninterruptible power supplies These batteries have thicker plates that can deliver less peak current but can withstand frequent discharging 28 Some batteries are designed as a compromise between starter high current and deep cycle They are able to be discharged to a greater degree than automotive batteries but less so than deep cycle batteries They may be referred to as marine motorhome batteries or leisure batteries Fast and slow charge and discharge Edit Charge current needs to match the ability of the battery to absorb the energy Using too large a charge current on a small battery can lead to boiling and venting of the electrolyte In this image a VRLA battery case has ballooned due to the high gas pressure developed during overcharge The capacity of a lead acid battery is not a fixed quantity but varies according to how quickly it is discharged The empirical relationship between discharge rate and capacity is known as Peukert s law When a battery is charged or discharged only the reacting chemicals which are at the interface between the electrodes and the electrolyte are initially affected With time the charge stored in the chemicals at the interface often called interface charge or surface charge spreads by diffusion of these chemicals throughout the volume of the active material Consider a battery that has been completely discharged such as occurs when leaving the car lights on overnight a current draw of about 6 amps If it then is given a fast charge for only a few minutes the battery plates charge only near the interface between the plates and the electrolyte In this case the battery voltage might rise to a value near that of the charger voltage this causes the charging current to decrease significantly After a few hours this interface charge will spread to the volume of the electrode and electrolyte this leads to an interface charge so low that it may be insufficient to start the car 29 As long as the charging voltage stays below the gassing voltage about 14 4 volts in a normal lead acid battery battery damage is unlikely and in time the battery should return to a nominally charged state Sulfation and desulfation 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 December 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sulfated plates from a 12 V 5 Ah batteryLead acid batteries lose the ability to accept a charge when discharged for too long due to sulfation the crystallization of lead sulfate 30 They generate electricity through a double sulfate chemical reaction Lead and lead dioxide the active materials on the battery s plates react with sulfuric acid in the electrolyte to form lead sulfate The lead sulfate first forms in a finely divided amorphous state and easily reverts to lead lead dioxide and sulfuric acid when the battery recharges As batteries cycle through numerous discharges and charges some lead sulfate does not recombine into electrolyte and slowly converts into a stable crystalline form that no longer dissolves on recharging Thus not all the lead is returned to the battery plates and the amount of usable active material necessary for electricity generation declines over time Sulfation occurs in lead acid batteries when they are subjected to insufficient charging during normal operation It impedes recharging sulfate deposits ultimately expand cracking the plates and destroying the battery Eventually so much of the battery plate area is unable to supply current that the battery capacity is greatly reduced In addition the sulfate portion of the lead sulfate is not returned to the electrolyte as sulfuric acid It is believed that large crystals physically block the electrolyte from entering the pores of the plates A white coating on the plates may be visible in batteries with clear cases or after dismantling the battery Batteries that are sulfated show a high internal resistance and can deliver only a small fraction of normal discharge current Sulfation also affects the charging cycle resulting in longer charging times less efficient and incomplete charging and higher battery temperatures SLI batteries starting lighting ignition e g car batteries suffer the most deterioration because vehicles normally stand unused for relatively long periods of time Deep cycle and motive power batteries are subjected to regular controlled overcharging eventually failing due to corrosion of the positive plate grids rather than sulfation Sulfation can be avoided if the battery is fully recharged immediately after a discharge cycle 31 There are no known independently verified ways to reverse sulfation 8 32 There are commercial products claiming to achieve desulfation through various techniques such as pulse charging but there are no peer reviewed publications verifying their claims Sulfation prevention remains the best course of action by periodically fully charging the lead acid batteries Stratification EditA typical lead acid battery contains a mixture with varying concentrations of water and acid Sulfuric acid has a higher density than water which causes the acid formed at the plates during charging to flow downward and collect at the bottom of the battery Eventually the mixture will again reach uniform composition by diffusion but this is a very slow process Repeated cycles of partial charging and discharging will increase stratification of the electrolyte reducing the capacity and performance of the battery because the lack of acid on top limits plate activation The stratification also promotes corrosion on the upper half of the plates and sulfation at the bottom 33 Periodic overcharging creates gaseous reaction products at the plate causing convection currents which mix the electrolyte and resolve the stratification Mechanical stirring of the electrolyte would have the same effect Batteries in moving vehicles are also subject to sloshing and splashing in the cells as the vehicle accelerates brakes and turns Risk of explosion Edit Car lead acid battery after explosion showing brittle fracture in casing endsExcessive charging causes electrolysis emitting hydrogen and oxygen This process is known as gassing Wet cells have open vents to release any gas produced and VRLA batteries rely on valves fitted to each cell Catalytic caps are available for flooded cells to recombine hydrogen and oxygen A VRLA cell normally recombines any hydrogen and oxygen produced inside the cell but malfunction or overheating may cause gas to build up If this happens for example on overcharging the valve vents the gas and normalizes the pressure producing a characteristic acid smell However valves can fail such as if dirt and debris accumulate allowing pressure to build up Accumulated hydrogen and oxygen sometimes ignite in an internal explosion The force of the explosion can cause the battery s casing to burst or cause its top to fly off spraying acid and casing fragments An explosion in one cell may ignite any combustible gas mixture in the remaining cells Similarly in a poorly ventilated area connecting or disconnecting a closed circuit such as a load or a charger to the battery terminals can also cause sparks and an explosion if any gas was vented from the cells Individual cells within a battery can also short circuit causing an explosion The cells of VRLA batteries typically swell when the internal pressure rises so giving a warning to users and mechanics The deformation varies from cell to cell and is greatest at the ends where the walls are unsupported by other cells Such over pressurized batteries should be carefully isolated and discarded Personnel working near batteries at risk for explosion should protect their eyes and exposed skin from burns due to spraying acid and fire by wearing a face shield overalls and gloves Using goggles instead of a face shield sacrifices safety by leaving the face exposed to possible flying acid case or battery fragments and heat from a potential explosion Environment EditEnvironmental concerns Edit According to a 2003 report entitled Getting the Lead Out by Environmental Defense and the Ecology Center of Ann Arbor Michigan the batteries of vehicles on the road contained an estimated 2 600 000 metric tons 2 600 000 long tons 2 900 000 short tons of lead Some lead compounds are extremely toxic Long term exposure to even tiny amounts of these compounds can cause brain and kidney damage hearing impairment and learning problems in children 34 The auto industry uses over 1 000 000 metric tons 980 000 long tons 1 100 000 short tons of lead every year with 90 going to conventional lead acid vehicle batteries While lead recycling is a well established industry more than 40 000 metric tons 39 000 long tons 44 000 short tons ends up in landfills every year According to the federal Toxic Release Inventory another 70 000 metric tons 69 000 long tons 77 000 short tons are released in the lead mining and manufacturing process 35 Attempts are being made to develop alternatives particularly for automotive use because of concerns about the environmental consequences of improper disposal and of lead smelting operations among other reasons Alternatives are unlikely to displace them for applications such as engine starting or backup power systems since the batteries although heavy are low cost Recycling Edit See also Battery recycling A worker recycling molten lead in a battery recycling facilityAccording to the Battery Council an industry group lead acid battery recycling is one of the most successful recycling programs in the world In the United States 99 of all battery lead was recycled between 2014 and 2018 36 dubious discuss better source needed However documents of the U S Environmental Protection Administration since 1982 have indicated rates varying between 60 and 95 37 38 Lead is highly toxic to humans and recycling it can result in pollution and contamination of people resulting in numerous and lasting health problems 39 40 One ranking identifies lead acid battery recycling as the world s most deadly industrial process in terms of disability adjusted life years lost resulting in 2 000 000 to 4 800 000 estimated years of individual human life lost globally 41 Lead acid battery recycling sites themselves have become a source of lead pollution and by 1992 the EPA had selected 29 such sites for its Superfund clean up with 22 on its National Priority List 38 An effective pollution control system is a necessity to prevent lead emission Continuous improvement in battery recycling plants and furnace designs is required to keep pace with emission standards for lead smelters Additives EditChemical additives have been used ever since the lead acid battery became a commercial item to reduce lead sulfate build up on plates and improve battery condition when added to the electrolyte of a vented lead acid battery Such treatments are rarely if ever effective 42 Two compounds used for such purposes are Epsom salts and EDTA Epsom salts reduce the internal resistance in a weak or damaged battery and may allow a small amount of extended life EDTA can be used to dissolve the sulfate deposits of heavily discharged plates However the dissolved material is then no longer available to participate in the normal charge discharge cycle so a battery temporarily revived with EDTA will have a reduced life expectancy Residual EDTA in the lead acid cell forms organic acids which will accelerate corrosion of the lead plates and internal connectors The active materials change physical form during charge discharge resulting in growth and distortion of the electrodes and shedding of electrodes into the electrolyte Once the active material has fallen out of the plates it cannot be restored into position by any chemical treatment Similarly internal physical problems such as cracked plates corroded connectors or damaged separators cannot be restored chemically Corrosion problems EditCorrosion of the external metal parts of the lead acid battery results from a chemical reaction of the battery terminals plugs and connectors Corrosion on the positive terminal is caused by electrolysis due to a mismatch of metal alloys used in the manufacture of the battery terminal and cable connector White corrosion is usually lead or zinc sulfate crystals Aluminum connectors corrode to aluminum sulfate Copper connectors produce blue and white corrosion crystals Corrosion of a battery s terminals can be reduced by coating the terminals with petroleum jelly or a commercially available product made for the purpose 43 If the battery is overfilled with water and electrolyte thermal expansion can force some of the liquid out of the battery vents onto the top of the battery This solution can then react with the lead and other metals in the battery connector and cause corrosion The electrolyte can seep from the plastic to lead seal where the battery terminals penetrate the plastic case Acid fumes that vaporize through the vent caps often caused by overcharging and insufficient battery box ventilation can allow the sulfuric acid fumes to build up and react with the exposed metals See also Edit energy portalAutomotive battery Battery room Comparison of commercial battery types Dry cell History of the battery List of battery sizes List of battery types Silver calcium battery UltraBatteryReferences Edit a b May Geoffrey J Davidson Alistair Monahov Boris February 2018 Lead batteries for utility energy storage A review Journal of Energy Storage 15 145 157 doi 10 1016 j est 2017 11 008 Product Specification Guide PDF Trojan Battery Company 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 06 04 Retrieved 2014 01 09 Technical Manual Sealed Lead Acid Batteries PDF Power Sonic Corporation 2018 12 17 p 19 retrieved 2014 01 09 Cowie Ivan 13 January 2014 All About Batteries Part 3 Lead acid Batteries UBM Canon Retrieved 3 November 2015 PS and PSG General Purpose Battery Specifications PS Series VRLA AGM Battery Valve Regulated Crompton Thomas Roy 2000 Battery Reference Book 3rd ed Newnes p 1 10 ISBN 07506 4625 X a b c d e Linden David Reddy Thomas B eds 2002 Handbook Of Batteries 3rd ed New York McGraw Hill p 23 5 ISBN 978 0 07 135978 8 Lead Acid Battery History Gaston Plante 1834 1889 Corrosion doctors org Last accessed on Jan 3 2007 Camm Frederick James Lead acid battery Wireless Constructor s Encyclopaedia third ed Schirber Michael 2011 01 14 Focus Relativity Powers Your Car Battery Physics American Physical Society 27 Retrieved 2019 12 25 Liquid Tin Bismuth Battery for Grid Scale Energy Storage InternationalTin org International Tin Association 2018 01 09 Retrieved 2019 12 25 For one example account of the importance of battery specific gravity to submariners see Ruhe William J 1996 War in the Boats My World War II Submarine Battles Brassey s p 112 ISBN 978 1 57488 028 1 Deep Cycle Battery FAQ WindSun com sec Battery voltages Archived from the original on 2010 07 22 Retrieved 2010 06 30 Handbook for stationary lead acid batteries Part 1 basics design operation modes and applications PDF Edition 6 GNB Industrial Power Exide Technologies February 2012 Archived from the original PDF on January 18 2020 Recommended voltage settings for 3 phase charging of flooded lead acid batteries Rolls Battery Retrieved on 17 April 2015 Moderne Akkumulatoren Page 55 ISBN 3 939359 11 4 IEEE 485 2020 Standard Dell Ronald David Anthony James Rand 2001 Understanding Batteries Royal Society of Chemistry ISBN 978 0 85404 605 8 LABD www labatscience com Archived from the original on 2008 08 20 United States Patent 5 948 567 Sudhan S Misra 25 May 2007 Advances in VRLAnext term battery technology for telecommunications Journal of Power Sources 168 1 40 8 Bibcode 2007JPS 168 40M doi 10 1016 j jpowsour 2006 11 005 dead link Paper on recent VRLA developments from the Japanese Technical Center SLI Yuasa Corporation EU Aviation News website Archived 2009 08 13 at the Wayback Machine tells about history usage and recent developments for VRLA Introduction to Deep Cycle Batteries in RE Systems Cowlishaw M F December 1974 The Characteristics and Use of Lead acid Cap Lamps PDF Trans British Cave Research Association 1 4 199 214 Battery FAQ at Northern Arizona Wind amp Sun visited 2006 07 23 Archived from the original on 2010 07 22 Retrieved 2006 07 23 Saslow Wayne M 2002 Electricity Magnetism and Light Toronto Thomson Learning pp 302 4 ISBN 978 0 12 619455 5 J W Simms The Boy Electrician George G Haerrap amp Co p 65 Equalize charging can prevent sulfation if performed prior to the lead sulfate forming crystals Broussely Michel Pistoia Gianfranco eds 2007 Industrial applications of batteries from cars to aerospace and energy storage Elsevier pp 502 3 ISBN 978 0 444 52160 6 Sulfation Remedies Demystified Batteryvitamin net Retrieved August 29 2020 Henry A Catherino Fred F Feres Francisco Trinidad 2004 Sulfation in lead acid batteries Journal of Power Sources 129 1 113 120 Bibcode 2004JPS 129 113C doi 10 1016 j jpowsour 2003 11 003 2 3 LEAD DOSE RESPONSE RELATIONSHIPS PDF TOXICOLOGICAL PROFILE FOR LEAD USA CDC Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry August 2007 p 31 retrieved 2013 09 26 These data suggest that certain subtle neurobehavioral effects in children may occur at very low PbBs PbB means lead blood level DeCicco John M Kliesch James February 2001 ACEEE s Green Book The Environmental Guide to Cars and Trucks ISBN 978 0 918249 45 6 Battery Council International PDF Battery Council Retrieved 25 August 2020 Conclusions in The Impacts of Lead Industry Economics and Hazardous Waste Regulations on Lead Acid Battery Recycling Revision and Update September 1987 prepared for the Office of Policy Analysis U S Environmental Protection Agency by Putnam Hayes amp Bartlett Inc Cambridge Massachusetts also at nepis epa gov retrieved May 15 2021 a b Engineering Bulletin Selection of Control Technologies for Remediation of Lead Battery Recycling Sites September 1992 Superfund EPA 540 S 95 011 U S Environmental Protection Agency also at nepis epa gov retrieved May 15 2021 Ericson Bret Howard Hu Emily Nash Greg Ferraro Julia Sinitsky Mark Patrick Taylor Blood lead levels in low income and middle income countries a systematic review March 2021 The Lancet Planetary Health of The Lancet DOI https doi org 10 1016 S2542 5196 20 30278 3 as cited in Pure Earth USC and Macquarie University Publish Landmark Lead Study in The Lancet Planetary Health Journal The Pollution Blog Pure Earth retrieved May 15 2021 Pearce Fred Getting the Lead Out Why Battery Recycling Is a Global Health Hazard November 2 2020 Yale Environment 360 Yale School of the Environment Yale University retrieved May 15 2021 Ballantyne Andrew D Hallett Jason P Riley D Jason Shah Nilay Payne David J 2018 Lead acid battery recycling for the twenty first century Royal Society Open Science 5 5 171368 Bibcode 2018RSOS 571368B doi 10 1098 rsos 171368 PMC 5990833 PMID 29892351 http museum nist gov exhibits adx2 partii htm Archived 2016 03 14 at the Wayback Machine A dispute on battery additives when Dr Vinal of the National Bureau of Standards reported on this for the National Better Business Bureau Horst Bauer ed 1996 Automotive Handbook 4th ed Robert Bosch p 805 ISBN 0 8376 0333 1 External links EditGeneral Edit magnalabs com battery plate sulfation reuk co uk battery desulfation reuk co uk lead acid batteries cbcdesign co uk DC supply April 2002 comcast net sme technical details on lead acid batteries Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lead acid batteries btterycouncil org BCI lead acid battery manufacturers trade organization batteryfaq org car and deep cycle battery FAQ atsdr cdc gov lead Pb toxicity key concepts ATSDR environmental medicine amp environmental health education CSEM case studies in environmental medicine CSEM agency for toxic substances and disease registry alton moore net lead acid battery desulfator Home Power 77 June July 2000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lead acid battery amp oldid 1168949284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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