Electrical Maximizing DIY Battery Pack Capacity: Understanding Amp-hours vs. Watt-hours

AI Thread Summary
When building a battery pack for a robot, connecting multiple AA Alkaline batteries in series increases the voltage while maintaining the same capacity. For example, two AA batteries connected in series will provide 3.0 V but retain a capacity of 2700 mAh, not 5400 mAh. The energy output in Watt-hours does increase with additional batteries, allowing for longer run times under certain load conditions. It's important to understand that while voltage adds up in series, the capacity in Amp-hours remains constant. This distinction is crucial for calculating the overall energy output and runtime of the battery pack.
CasVS
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Hi,

I am a university student in the Netherlands and I just got the assignment of building a robot on a budget. Because of this budget I would like to make the battery pack that powers the 2 servo motors and 2 electric motors myself.

I did some research and found out it would be best to connect multiple AA Alkaline (1.5 V 2700 mAh) batteries. I know my basic physics as the current will stay the same and voltage adds up, though what about the capacity? I understand how this battery works but now my question was if I connect for example two batteries do I get a battery pack that can deliver 3.0 V with 5400 mAh, or just the 3.0 V with again a capacity of 2700 mAh.

Thanks in advance!
 
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CasVS said:
two batteries do I get a battery pack that can deliver 3.0 V with 5400 mAh, or just the 3.0 V with again a capacity of 2700 mAh.
Think about it ... a little bit more and you will have answered your own question.:rolleyes::wink:
 
Bystander said:
Think about it ... a little bit more and you will have answered your own question.:rolleyes::wink:
You sound like my physics tutors haha! I calculated the amount of Watts and think it is silly to assume that both the capacity and the voltage gets doubled. So from this I will assume that the battery pack would have a 8.1 W output with the 3.0 V and 2700 mAh!

Thanks
 
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Ta-da.
 
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See ? You new all along !
 
That's a pretty common source of confusion. Charge capacity in terms of Amp-hours does not change with the number of series cells, but energy capacity in terms of Watt-hours multiplies with the number of series cells. For a load that consumes a constant amount of power run time will double, for an ohmic load where power consumption goes up with voltage run time will not increase.
 
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