How to Evaluate the Quality of a Battery: A Comprehensive Guide1. Internal Resistance: The Hidden Factor Affecting Efficiency. Self-Discharge Rate: Assessing Long-Term Storage Capability.
Well-developed battery test technologies must recognize all battery conditions and provide reliable results, even if the charge is low. This is a demanding request as a good battery that is only partially charged behaves in a similar way to a faded pack that is fully charged.
How do I know if a battery is a good battery?
When testing a battery, three SoH indicators must be evaluated: Batteries come in many conditions and a charge can easily mask a symptom allowing a weak battery to perform well. Likewise, a strong battery with low charge shares similarities with a pack that exhibits capacity loss.
How do you test a battery?
Test methods range from taking a voltage reading, to measuring the internal resistance by a pulse or AC impedance method, to coulomb counting, and to taking a snapshot of the chemical battery with Electrochemical Impedance Spectroscopy (EIS).
Can a battery be measured in a comprehensive test?
No practical method exists to quantify all conditions of a battery in a short, comprehensive test. State-of-health (SoH) cannot be measured per se, it can only be estimated to various degrees of accuracy based on available symptoms. If the symptoms are vague or not present, a reliable measurement is not possible.
A dead battery is easy to check and all testers are 100 percent accurate. The challenge comes in evaluating a battery in the 80–100 percent performance range while on duty. Regulators struggle to introduce battery test procedures. This is mostly due to the unavailability of suitable technology that can assess a battery on the fly.
Why do you need an analytical solution for battery testing?
Innovative analytical solutions are required to test individual battery components, like positive and negative electrode materials, separator, electrolytes, and more, during the development and quality control in production.