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Posted

Hi,

I've recently started with electronics as a hobby, thanks to Arduino. It looks I've some misconceptions about battery voltage supply, and I'd appreciate somebody clearing this up for me.

I've a battery that's supplying around 9.3V (when I connect multimeter to the two terminals without any load, it measures around 9.3V).
I assumed this battery will always supplies 9.3V to any circuit.
However, when I connected a 220ohm resistor and an LED in series, and measured voltage across the two wires connected to battery terminals, I found it to be just 3.23V.
When I removed LED and left only the resistor plugged in, I got just 2.25V.
Why is this? Why isn't it always 9.3V? Does voltage supplied by a battery depend on the load in the circuit?

I also tried this by replacing the battery with Arduino, and using it as a simple power supply. I plugged in the resistor and LED in series into  the 5V and GND analog pins. Voltage across the leads running into the pins measured 5V as expected. I removed the LED from the circuit, and it still measured 5V. I expected the battery supplied circuit to work like this, but it didn't. Is it that Arduino outputs a constant 5V voltage always, regardless of  the load in the circuit?

Thanks


Posted

It sounds like the battery is flat so is unable to keep the voltage near 9V when a load is connected. The impedance of the battery rises as it discharges until it's so high, the voltage across the load is too low for it to work.

Posted

Thanks for your reply! This battery's a really old one...16 to 17 years (yes!) old. It had remained wrapped and unused all this time. I was glad when it reported 9+ V and assumed it's ok, but it seems things're not so simple. Time to buy a new one!

  • 5 weeks later...

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