The lead-acid battery discharge curve equation is given by the battery capacity (in ah) divided by the number of hours it takes to discharge the battery. For illustration, a 500 Ah battery capacity that theoretically discharges to a cut-off voltage in 20 hours will have a discharge rate of 500 amps / 20 hours = 25 amps.
Sealed lead-acid batteries are generally rated with a 20-hour discharge rate. That is the current that the battery can provide in 20 hours discharged to a final voltage of 1.75 volts per second at a temperature of 25 degrees Celsius.
The nominal capacity of sealed lead acid battery is calculated according to JIS C8702-1 Standard with using 20-hour discharge rate. For example, the capacity of WP5-12 battery is 5Ah, which means that when the battery is discharged with C20 rate, i.e., 0.25 amperes, the discharge time will be 20 hours.
3.3 Battery Self-discharge The lead acid battery will have self-discharge reaction under open circuit condition, in which the lead is reacted with sulfuric acid to form lead sulfate and evolve hydrogen. The reaction is accelerated at higher temperature. The result of self-discharge is the lowering of voltage and capacity loss.
During a normal discharge cycle, lead-acid batteries form a layer of amorphous lead sulfate on their plates. Charging converts the amorphous form of lead sulfate back to lead.
When the lead acid battery is discharging, the active materials of both the positive and negative plates are reacted with sulfuric acid to form lead sulfate. After discharge, the concentration of sulfuric acid in the electrolyte is decreased, and results in the increase of the internal resistance of the battery.
This Calctown calculator calculates the actual battery life of a lead acid battery. Peukert''s law, presented by the German scientist Wilhelm Peukert in 1897, expresses the capacity of a battery in terms of the rate at which it is discharged.
Okay, like the title suggests, I need a method of calculating self discharge rates of Lead-Acid batteries. Here''s the catch: I varied the electrolyte which the batteries were using, replacing sulphuric acid with hydrochloric acid, another one with …