lester12483 said:
This is a question for someone who has better knowledge than me.
I have two batteries. One is a 36 volt 10 ah , and the other is 36 volt 12 ah. If I tried to connect these in parallel, what would the outcome be? thanks
Overheating perhaps leading to an explosion if you're not careful depending on which battery combination, discharge rates and chemistry.
While theoretically, you would have 22ah, the true capacity is somewhat less. Ideally, you should connect 2 batteries in parallel with similar chemistry, same discharge rates (same C rates) and balanced so their open circuit voltage should be roughly the same and they drain simultaneously together. What you are proposing here is in fact an imbalance. With an imbalance parallel circuit, 1/3 of the current drain comes from the weak battery (10ah), while 2/3 drain from the stronger 12ah. So for a 10amp load, 3.33A will come from the 10ah battery, whereas 6.66A will come from the 12ah battery relatively speaking. If the current drain is high and consistent as in the case of an ebike, sooner or later the 36v 10ah battery may drop its open terminal voltage lower than the 36v 12ah (assuming both have exactly the same C rates, chemistry), and if that is the case, the stronger battery will recharge the weaker battery. The energy stored in the stronger battery is simply transferred with some loss from resistive (cabling) and heat to the weaker battery and that energy from the weaker battery is then used to continually power the motor. As far as the load is concerned, it is seeing a 22ah battery pack, but the actual capacity will be close, probably a bit more than 20% of full capacity (since quick charge can only achieve 80% of expect capacity in a short time).
You can actually do this as an experiment. Try paralleling a 5V power supply to a 1.2v NiMH battery and you'll see that, the voltage drops from 5v to somewhere near 3 or 2.5v on the terminal. If you leave it long enough, it starts to heat up the battery or may cause an explosion. So don't leave it too long!
But here's the problem. Not all batteries are made alike. Different chemistry have differing discharge characteristics and rates. Unless you know for sure the battery paralleled together are similar in almost everything, you're really playing with Russian Roulette. The problem is compounded by the fact that some batteries do not like to be recharged without a proper charger -- Lithium Ion or some specialized chemistry.
If you still do want to mix and match batteries, I say choose the first pack to have a higher C rate, higher capacity, so the open terminal voltage of the battery won't drop too much during load. So the 12ah should ideally have a 4 to 5C rate. The second extended capacity pack should be something that can take the abuse, like a NiCad, NiMH or even a SLA with a lower C rate. What you don't want is to have your 1C Chinese Lithium pack be recharged by a stronger high discharge rated pack just because the Lithium pack may drop the voltage more dramatically during extended loading by the motor, while the high discharge rate pack may drop less.
DE.