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The 2 most important parameters impacting the performance of a battery  |  Cycle life  |  Self discharge  |  Technology comparison  |  Battery pack configurations
The 2 most important parameters impacting the performance of a battery

In order to calculate the right capacity for a battery you need to do more than just multiply the energy requirement by the time. The number of Wh or Ah you have calculated is only what the application needs in order to run for a specified time. Important to understand is that the battery has some efficiency losses in charge and discharge. The battery needs to be overcompensated for this efficiency loss if you want to reach the required autonomy.

There are 2 major factors that impact the so-called efficiency of the battery:
- Discharge rate/Charge rate
- Temperature

1) Discharge rate and charge rate.
The faster you charge and or discharge a battery, the more internal resistance the battery will have. The internal resistance converts part of the electrical energy into heat. The faster you would like to charge or discharge the lower the efficiency and as a result the more heat generation you will have. This is a genuine problem for batteries and makes it also very difficult to compare the performance of batteries.
While reading the above you can come to the conclusion that if I discharge a battery in 1 hour, I have a different number of Wh in discharged capacity than when I discharge the battery in 5 hours. That's why within the battery industry we talk about rated capacity.

As the rated capacity is based on a discharge of 5 hours, it means that any discharge faster than 5 hours causes loss of efficiency, and as a result you will have less Wh in discharge. The effect of this is shown in the graphs below. The values mentioned are expressed as a ration of the rated capacity (e.g. a discharge of 5 hours means that the discharge current is 1/5 of the capacity value, this is described as 0.2C (1/5C)).


For charging the same applies, but of course the voltage is low when the charge starts and gets higher during the charge. The two curves below show the difference between a fast charge and a standard charge. You can see that the besides the fact that the voltage is higher with the fast charge, also the efficiency is better. The effect of temperature is explained in Ad 2.















2) Temperature effect in charge and discharge.
If the battery temperature is higher or lower than room temperature, the battery will also have a decreased efficiency in charge and discharge. The phenomenon is exactly similar to what is described here-above for the charge- and discharge rate. If you know that your battery has to deliver a certain performance at a temperature different than room temperature, you need to overcompensate the battery capacity for this as well.













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