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  2. Lead–acid battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leadacid_battery

    The leadacid battery is a type of rechargeable battery first invented in 1859 by French ... which limits further reaction, unless charge is allowed to flow out of ...

  3. IUoU battery charging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IUoU_battery_charging

    Example charging graph. On the left: per-cell quantities. On the right: example values for a 40 Ah, 6-cell (12 V) battery. Note: schematic illustration; not based on actual measurements. IUoU is a DIN-designation [1] (DIN 41773) for a lead-acid battery charging procedure that is also known as 3-stage charging, 3-phase charging, or 3-step charging.

  4. UltraBattery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/UltraBattery

    Normal lead acid battery operation sees small lead sulfate crystals growing on the negative electrode during discharging and dissolving back into the electrolyte during charging. The electrodes are constructed of a lead grid, with a lead-based active material compound – lead oxide – forming the remainder of the positive plate.

  5. Rechargeable battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rechargeable_battery

    UltraBattery, a hybrid leadacid battery and ultracapacitor invented by Australia's national science organisation CSIRO, exhibits tens of thousands of partial state of charge cycles and has outperformed traditional lead-acid, lithium, and NiMH-based cells when compared in testing in this mode against variability management power profiles. [44]

  6. VRLA battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/VRLA_battery

    A 12V VRLA battery, typically used in small uninterruptible power supplies and emergency lamps. A valve regulated leadacid (VRLA) battery, commonly known as a sealed leadacid (SLA) battery, [1] is a type of leadacid battery characterized by a limited amount of electrolyte ("starved" electrolyte) absorbed in a plate separator or formed into a gel; proportioning of the negative and ...

  7. Battery regenerator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battery_regenerator

    Conventional leadacid batteries consist of a number of plates of lead and lead dioxide suspended in a cell filled with weak sulfuric acid. Lead oxide reacts with the sulfur and oxygen in the acid to give up an electron, leaving the plate positively charged and producing lead sulfate. Lead reacts with the acid by taking in two electrons ...

  8. Electric battery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electric_battery

    Rechargeable batteries are (re)charged by applying electric current, which reverses the chemical reactions that occur during discharge/use. Devices to supply the appropriate current are called chargers. The oldest form of rechargeable battery is the leadacid battery, which are widely used in automotive and boating applications.

  9. Trickle charging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trickle_charging

    [1] [2] A battery under continuous float voltage charging is said to be float-charging. [3] For leadacid batteries under no-load float charging (such as in SLI batteries), trickle charging happens naturally at the end-of-charge, when the leadacid battery internal resistance to the charging current increases enough to reduce additional ...