Difference between revisions of "State of Charge (SoC)"
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− | To get accurate readings, the battery needs to rest in the open circuit state for at least four hours; battery manufacturers recommend 24 hours for lead acid. This makes the voltage-based SoC method impractical for a battery in active duty. | + | To get accurate readings, the battery needs to rest in the open circuit state for at least four hours; battery manufacturers recommend 24 hours for [[lead acid]]. This makes the voltage-based SoC method impractical for a battery in active duty. |
== See also == | == See also == |
Revision as of 08:04, 24 July 2021
To get accurate readings, the battery needs to rest in the open circuit state for at least four hours; battery manufacturers recommend 24 hours for lead acid. This makes the voltage-based SoC method impractical for a battery in active duty.
See also
- Lead, Lead–acid battery, SoC, BMS, VRLA, State of Charge (SoC), Trickle charging, Peukert's law
- Lithium-ion Batteries: Lithium, Iron (LFP) Nickel, LMO, Cobalt, manganese, LG Chem, Panasonic, Maxwell, Tesla, CATL, BMS, BYD, Wh/kg, 18650, 2170, 4680, Lithium-titanate battery (LTO), Yahua, CBAK, NMC, NCA, Automotive Energy Supply Corporation, Tianqi Lithium Corp, Electric outboard engine, Anode, TWh, Cycle life, 3-phenyl-1,4,2-dioxazol-5-one (PDO)
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