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Batteries
How a Battery Works
by Mary Bellis
A battery, which is actually
an electric cell, is a device that produces electricity from a chemical
reaction.
Strictly speaking, a battery
consists of two or more cells connected in series or parallel, but the term is
generally used for a single cell.
A cell consists of a negative
electrode; an electrolyte, which conducts ions; a separator, also an ion
conductor; and a positive electrode.
The electrolyte may be
aqueous (composed of water) or nonaqueous (not composed of water), in liquid,
paste, or solid form.
When the cell is connected to
an external load, or device to be powered, the negative electrode supplies a
current of electrons that flow through the load and are accepted by the
positive electrode.
When the external load is
removed the reaction ceases.
A primary battery is one that
can convert its chemicals into electricity only once and then must be discarded.
A secondary battery has
electrodes that can be reconstituted by passing electricity back through it;
also called a storage or rechargeable battery, it can be reused many times.
Batteries come in several
styles; the most familiar are single-use alkaline batteries.
What is a Nickel Cadmium Battery?
The
first NiCd battery was created by Waldemar Jungner of Sweden in 1899.
This battery uses nickel
oxide in its positive electrode (cathode), a cadmium compound in its negative
electrode (anode), and potassium hydroxide solution as its electrolyte.
The Nickel Cadmium Battery is
rechargeable, so it can cycle repeatedly.
A nickel cadmium battery
converts chemical energy to electrical energy upon discharge and converts
electrical energy back to chemical energy upon recharge.
In a fully discharged NiCd
battery, the cathode contains nickel hydroxide [Ni(OH)2] and cadmium hydroxide
[Cd(OH)2] in the anode.
When the battery is charged,
the chemical composition of the cathode is transformed and the nickel hydroxide
changes to nickel oxyhydroxide [NiOOH].
In the anode, cadmium
hydroxide is transformed to cadmium.
As the battery is discharged,
the process is reversed, as shown in the following formula.
Cd + 2H2O + 2NiOOH —> 2Ni(OH)2
+ Cd(OH)2
What is a Nickel Hydrogen Battery?
The
nickel hydrogen battery was used for the first time in 1977 aboard the U.S.
Navy's navigation technology satellite-2 (NTS-2).
The Nickel-Hydrogen battery
can be considered a hybrid between the nickel-cadmium battery and the fuel
cell.
The cadmium electrode was
replaced with a hydrogen gas electrode.
This battery is visually much
different from the Nickel-Cadmium battery because the cell is a pressure
vessel, which must contain over one thousand pounds per square inch (psi) of
hydrogen gas.
It is significantly lighter
than nickel-cadmium, but is more difficult to package, much like a crate of
eggs.
Nickel-hydrogen batteries are
sometimes confused with Nickel-Metal Hydride batteries, the batteries commonly
found in cell phones and laptops.
Nickel-hydrogen, as well as
nickel-cadmium batteries use the same electrolyte, a solution of potassium
hydroxide, which is commonly called lye.
Incentives for developing
nickel/metal hydride (Ni-MH) batteries comes from pressing health and
environmental concerns to find replacements for the nickel/cadmium rechargeable
batteries.
Due to worker's safety
requirements, processing of cadmium for batteries in the U.S. is already in the
process of being phased out.
Furthermore, environmental
legislation for the 1990's and the 21st century will most likely make it
imperative to curtail the use of cadmium in batteries for consumer use.
In spite of these pressures,
next to the lead-acid battery, the nickel/cadmium battery still has the largest
share of the rechargeable battery market.
Further incentives for
researching hydrogen-based batteries comes from the general belief that
hydrogen and electricity will displace and eventually replace a significant
fraction of the energy-carrying contributions of fossil-fuel resources,
becoming the foundation for a sustainable energy system based on renewable
sources.
Finally, there is
considerable interest in the development of Ni-MH batteries for electric
vehicles and hybrid vehicles.
The nickel/metal hydride
battery operates in concentrated KOH (potassium hydroxide) electrolyte. The
electrode reactions in a nickel/metal hydride battery are as follows:
Cathode (+): NiOOH + H2O + e- Ni(OH)2 + OH- (1)
Anode (-): (1/x) MHx + OH- (1/x) M + H2O + e- (2)
Overall: (1/x) MHx + NiOOH (1/x) M + Ni(OH)2 (3)
The KOH electrolyte can only
transport the OH- ions and, to balance the charge transport, electrons must
circulate through the external load.
The nickel oxy-hydroxide
electrode (equation 1) has been extensively researched and characterized, and
its application has been widely demonstrated for both terrestrial and aerospace
applications.
Most of the current research
in Ni/Metal Hydride batteries has involved improving the performance of the
metal hydride anode.
Specifically, this requires
the development of a hydride electrode with the following characteristics:
(1)
long cycle life,
(2)
high capacity,
(3)
high rate of charge and discharge at a constant voltage, and
(4)
retention capacity.
What is a Lithium Battery?
These
systems are different from all of the previously mentioned batteries, in that
no water is used in the electrolyte.
They use a non-aqueous
electrolyte instead, which is composed of organic liquids and salts of lithium
to provide ionic conductivity.
This system has much higher
cell voltages than the aqueous electrolyte systems.
Without water, the evolution
of hydrogen and oxygen gases is eliminated and cells can operate with much
wider potentials.
They also require a more
complex assembly, as it must be done in a nearly perfectly dry atmosphere.
A number of non-rechargeable
batteries were first developed with lithium metal as the anode.
Commercial coin cells used
for today's watch batteries are mostly a lithium chemistry.
These systems use a variety
of cathode systems that are safe enough for consumer use.
The cathodes are made of
various materials, such as carbon monoflouride, copper oxide, or vanadium
pentoxide.
All solid cathode systems are
limited in the discharge rate they will support.
To obtain a higher discharge
rate, liquid cathode systems were developed.
The electrolyte is reactive
in these designs and reacts at the porous cathode, which provides catalytic
sites and electrical current collection.
Several examples of these
systems include lithium-thionyl chloride and lithium-sulfur dioxide.
These batteries are used in
space and for military applications, as well as for emergency beacons on the
ground.
They are generally not
available to the public because they are less safe than the solid cathode
systems.
The next step in lithium ion
battery technology is believed to be the lithium polymer battery.
This battery replaces the
liquid electrolyte with either a gelled electrolyte or a true solid
electrolyte.
These batteries are supposed
to be even lighter than lithium ion batteries, but there are currently no plans
to fly this technology in space.
It is also not commonly
available in the commercial market, although it may be just around the corner.
In retrospect, we have come a
long way since the leaky flashlight batteries of the sixties, when space
flight was born.
There is a wide range of
solutions available to meet the many demands of space flight, 80 below zero to
the high temperatures of a solar fly by.
It is possible to handle
massive radiation, decades of service, and loads reaching tens of kilowatts.
There will be a continued
evolution of this technology and a constant striving toward improved batteries.
Mary Bellis has been writing about inventors since
1997. She also loves to tinker (invent) and spends too much time in her
workshop developing her ideas.
Experience
Forbes Best of the Web credits Mary for creating
the number one online destination for information about inventors and
inventions. Her writing has been reprinted and referenced to in numerous
educational books and articles. Her opinion and advice is requested by media
outlets on a constant basis. In addition, she has produced and directed a
number of films, including a documentary on Alexander Graham Bell, the inventor
of the telephone, and has worked as a curator specializing in computer generated
art.
Education
Mary has two degrees in film and animation from
the San Francisco Art Institute. She is a big fan of both history and
technology and an avid reader of books and periodicals on those topics.
Mary Bellis
I have a passion for inventing and a deep
respect for all inventors. I know firsthand the difficulties that inventors
face and I want to help by making the path from idea to marketplace a clearer
process.
https://www.thoughtco.com/how-a-battery-works-1991356 .
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