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  2. Electric battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_battery

    In 2024 a prototype battery for electric cars that could charge from 10% to 80% in five minutes was demonstrated, [53] and a Chinese company claimed that car batteries it had introduced charged 10% to 80% in 10.5 minutes—the fastest batteries available—compared to Tesla's 15 minutes to half-charge.

  3. Battery charger - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battery_charger

    A 10-ampere-hour battery could take 15 hours to reach a fully charged state from a fully discharged condition with a 1-ampere charger as it would require roughly 1.5 times the battery's capacity. Public EV charging stations often provide 6 kW (host power of 208 to 240 V AC off a 40-ampere circuit). 6 kW will recharge an EV roughly six times ...

  4. Rechargeable battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rechargeable_battery

    A rechargeable battery, storage battery, or secondary cell (formally a type of energy accumulator), is a type of electrical battery which can be charged, discharged into a load, and recharged many times, as opposed to a disposable or primary battery, which is supplied fully charged and discarded after use.

  5. Electromotive force - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electromotive_force

    Inside a source of emf (such as a battery) that is open-circuited, a charge separation occurs between the negative terminal N and the positive terminal P. This leads to an electrostatic field E o p e n c i r c u i t {\displaystyle {\boldsymbol {E}}_{\mathrm {open\ circuit} }} that points from P to N , whereas the emf of the source must be able ...

  6. Electric charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_charge

    The electric charge of a macroscopic object is the sum of the electric charges of the particles that it is made up of. This charge is often small, because matter is made of atoms, and atoms typically have equal numbers of protons and electrons, in which case their charges cancel out, yielding a net charge of zero, thus making the atom neutral.

  7. Lead–acid battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead–acid_battery

    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).

  8. Charge (physics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge_(physics)

    This charge is sometimes called the Noether charge. Thus, for example, the electric charge is the generator of the U(1) symmetry of electromagnetism. The conserved current is the electric current. In the case of local, dynamical symmetries, associated with every charge is a gauge field; when quantized, the gauge field becomes a gauge boson. The ...

  9. Trickle charging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trickle_charging

    Trickle charging is the process of charging a fully charged battery at a rate equal to its self-discharge rate, enabling the battery to remain at its fully charged level. This state occurs almost exclusively when the battery is not loaded, as trickle charging will not keep a battery charged if current is being drawn by a load.