State of charge (soc) of a battery – Samlex America SCC-30AB Manuel d'utilisation

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GENERAL INFORMATION: BATTERIEs

Reduction in Usable Capacity at Higher Discharge Rates

As stated above, the rated capacity of the battery in Ah is normally applicable at a
discharge rate of 20 Hours. As the discharge rate is increased, the usable capacity
reduces due to “Peukert Effect”. This relationship is not linear but is more or less
according to the Table below:

HOURS OF

DISCHARGE

DISCHARGE

RATE

DISCHARGE RATE

FOR 100Ah BATTERy

USABLE

CAPACITy

20 Hrs.

C/20 A

5A

100 %

10 Hrs.

C/10 A

10A

87 %

8 Hrs.

C/8 A

12.5A

83 %

6 Hrs.

C/6 A

16.7A

75 %

5 Hrs.

C/5 A

20A

70 %

3 Hrs.

C/3 A

33.3A

60 %

2 Hrs.

C/2 A

50A

50 %

1 Hrs.

C A

100A

40 %

Table 3.2. Battery Capacity versus Rate of Discharge

Using the above Table will show that a 100 Ah capacity battery will deliver 100% (i.e.
full 100 Ah) capacity if it is slowly discharged over 20 hours at the rate of C/20 A or 5A.
However, if it is discharged at a rate of 2 Hrs. (C/2A or 50A) then theoretically, it should
provide 100 Ah ÷ 50A = 2 Hours. However, the Table above shows that for 2 Hours
discharge rate (C/2A or 50A), the capacity is reduced to 50% (i.e. 50 Ah). Therefore, at
50 Ampere discharge rate the battery will actually last for 50 Ah ÷ 50A = 1 Hour.

State of Charge (SOC) of a Battery

The “Standing Voltage” of a battery can approximately indicate the State of Charge
(SOC) of the battery. The “Standing Voltage” is measured after disconnecting any
charging device(s) and the battery load(s) and letting the battery “stand” idle for
3 to 8 hours before the voltage measurement is taken.
Table 3.3 shows the State of
Charge versus Standing Voltage for a 12V battery system (6 cells in series) at around
80ºF (26.7ºC). For 24-volt systems, multiply by 2 (12 cells in series); for 48-volt systems,
multiply by 4 (24 cells in series).

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