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Zinc–air battery

Zinc–air battery
Specific energy

470 (practical),1370 (theoretical) Wh/kg

(1.692, 4.932 MJ/kg)
Energy density

1480-9780 Wh/L

(5.328–35.21 MJ/L)
Specific power 100 W/kg
Nominal cell voltage 1.65 V

470 (practical),1370 (theoretical) Wh/kg

1480-9780 Wh/L

Zinc–air batteries (non-rechargeable; IEC codes: A, P), and zinc–air fuel cells (mechanically rechargeable) are metal-air batteries powered by oxidizing zinc with oxygen from the air. These batteries have high energy densities and are relatively inexpensive to produce. Sizes range from very small button cells for hearing aids, larger batteries used in film cameras that previously used mercury batteries, to very large batteries used for electric vehicle propulsion.

During discharge, a mass of zinc particles forms a porous anode, which is saturated with an electrolyte. Oxygen from the air reacts at the cathode and forms hydroxyl ions which migrate into the zinc paste and form zincate (Zn(OH)2−
4
), releasing electrons to travel to the cathode. The zincate decays into zinc oxide and water returns to the electrolyte. The water and hydroxyl from the anode are recycled at the cathode, so the water is not consumed. The reactions produce a theoretical 1.65 volts, but this is reduced to 1.35–1.4 V in available cells.


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