The capacity of lithium battery cells is measured in amp-hours (Ah) or sometimes milliamp-hours (mAh) where 1 Ah = 1,000 mAh. Lithium battery cells can have anywhere from a few mAh to 100 Ah. Occasionally the unit watt-hour (Wh) will be listed on a cell instead of the amp-hour. Watt-hour is another unit of energy, but also consider voltage.
Don’t allow the battery voltage to drop below 3.0V as it can damage the battery Lithium batteries will often have a specified maximum discharge current of say 2C, which means 2x their mAh rating. For example a 120mAh battery with a 2C max discharge current would only allow you to draw up to 240mA continuous operating current.
The capacity of a cell is probably the most critical factor, as it determines how much energy is available in the cell. The capacity of lithium battery cells is measured in amp-hours (Ah) or sometimes milliamp-hours (mAh) where 1 Ah = 1,000 mAh. Lithium battery cells can have anywhere from a few mAh to 100 Ah.
Occasionally lithium battery cells are marketed with just a C rating and not a maximum current rating. This can make it easier to compare the power level of battery cells of different capacities. As long as you know the capacity of the cell, you can use the C rate to quickly calculate the maximum current rating of the cell.
Here we will look at the most important lithium ion battery specifications. The capacity of a cell is probably the most critical factor, as it determines how much energy is available in the cell. The capacity of lithium battery cells is measured in amp-hours (Ah) or sometimes milliamp-hours (mAh) where 1 Ah = 1,000 mAh.
Like all batteries the Li-ion battery also has a voltage and capacity rating. The nominal voltage rating for all lithium cells will be 3.6V, so you need higher voltage specification you have to combine two or more cells in series to attain it. By default all the lithium ion cells will have a nominal voltage of only ~3.6V.
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Because lithium-ion batteries can have a variety of positive and negative electrode materials, the energy density and voltage vary accordingly. The open-circuit voltage is higher than in aqueous batteries (such as lead–acid, nickel–metal hydride and nickel–cadmium). Internal resistance increases with both cycling and age, although this depends strongly on the voltage and temperature the batteries are stored at. Rising internal resi…