- scritto da EDECOAOfficial
Battery Internal Resistance Explained
- scritto da EDECOAOfficial
Category: DC Engineering
Difficulty: Advanced
Estimated Reading Time: 18–22
minutes Applies to: 12V / 24V / 48V Systems, RV, Off-Grid, Marine, Backup Installations
Who this is for: Users seeing voltage sag, low-voltage shutdowns, or weak surge performance despite “enough watts.”
Not for: Spec-sheet comparisons without load testing—internal resistance is a behavior metric.
Stop rule: If you can observe voltage at the battery terminals and at inverter input during a surge, you can localize the root cause.
Every battery contains internal resistance.
It is not visible.
It is not printed clearly on labels.
But it defines:
Internal resistance (Ri) is the inherent opposition to current flow inside the battery.
When current flows:
Vdrop = I × R
This voltage drop happens inside the battery itself.
In inverter applications:
Even small internal resistance becomes significant.
Example:
Battery internal resistance = 5 milliohms (0.005Ω) Surge current = 300A
Voltage drop:
0.005 × 300 = 1.5V
If battery nominal voltage is 12.5V:
Under surge, terminal voltage may drop to ~11V.
Inverter may trip.
Inverter is not weak. Battery internal resistance is the limiting factor.
Capacity (Ah) does not equal power capability.
A large-capacity battery with high internal resistance:
Energy (Wh) and power delivery (A) are separate properties.
Internal resistance defines power capability.
Internal resistance comes from:
It increases over time.
It increases at low temperature.
It increases with poor maintenance.
However:
Lithium still has internal resistance. It is not zero.
Temperature dramatically affects internal resistance.
Cold battery:
Example:
A lithium battery at 25°C may handle 200A easily.
At 0°C, internal resistance rises.
Under 200A load, voltage drop increases significantly.
Cold morning inverter shutdowns are often internal resistance driven.
As battery ages:
Result:
Aging increases Ri gradually.
Monitoring voltage sag trends over time reveals aging progression.
Parallel batteries must share current evenly.
If one battery has slightly lower internal resistance:
It supplies more current.
It heats more.
Its resistance increases slower initially.
Imbalance grows.
Eventually:
Parallel configuration requires resistance matching.
During surge:
Voltage sag equals:
[ V_{total} = I × (R_i + R_{cable}) ]
If both internal resistance and cable resistance are significant:
Voltage collapse becomes unavoidable.
Many installers focus only on cable sizing.
Battery internal resistance is equally important.
For more information, see Voltage Drop Calculation Guide.
Lithium batteries include BMS.
BMS monitors:
If internal resistance causes excessive heat or voltage drop:
BMS may:
Users interpret this as “battery defective.”
Often it is normal protection behavior under excessive current demand.
Professional methods:
Practical field method:
[ R_i ≈ \frac{ΔV}{I} ]
Example:
Rest voltage: 13.0V Loaded voltage at 100A: 12.6V
Voltage drop: 0.4V
Internal resistance:
0.4 ÷ 100 = 0.004Ω (4 milliohms)
Repeat periodically to detect aging.
Lower voltage systems (12V) amplify internal resistance impact.
Example:
0.5V drop at 12V = 4.2% 0.5V drop at 48V = 1%
Higher system voltage reduces relative impact of internal resistance.
This is another reason high-power systems benefit from 24V/48V architecture.
Power dissipated inside battery:
[ P = I^2 × R_i ]
At 200A and 0.005Ω:
[ 200^2 × 0.005 = 200W ]
That heat is internal.
High internal resistance increases:
Heat and resistance form a feedback loop.
Symptoms:
Root cause:
Solution:
Monitoring platforms allow:
If sag increases over months:
Internal resistance likely rising.
Data-driven maintenance prevents sudden failure.
Internal resistance determines:
Ignoring internal resistance results in unstable systems.
To compensate for resistance growth:
Engineering is about margin management.
Battery internal resistance is the hidden variable linking:
It is the invisible constraint shaping inverter system behavior.
Professional system design requires acknowledging it.
For more information, see Runtime Calculation Guide.
Internal resistance defines real-world battery performance under load.
It increases with:
In inverter systems, stability depends on:
Capacity defines how long you can run. Internal resistance defines whether you can start.
In high-performance inverter systems, power delivery stability is more critical than nominal amp-hours.
Q: Why does my battery show full charge but inverter shuts down? A: Likely high internal resistance causing voltage sag under load.
Q: Does lithium eliminate internal resistance problems? A: It reduces but does not eliminate them.
Q: How can I detect increasing internal resistance? A: Monitor voltage sag under known load over time.
Q: Is internal resistance more important in 12V systems? A: Yes, because lower voltage magnifies its effect.
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