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Why do batteries seem to go dead and then come back to life if you let them rest?

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Why do batteries seem to go dead and then come back to life if you let them rest?

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The “self-recharging” features of batteries is most noticeable in a car battery. In some cases you can crank the engine until the battery seems totally dead, then come back an hour later and crank it again. The higher the drain on the battery (a car’s starter motor is an incredibly high-drain device!), the greater the effect. To understand why this happens, it is helpful to understand what’s going on inside the battery. Let’s take the simplest zinc/carbon battery as an example. If you take a zinc rod and a carbon rod, connect them together with a wire, and then immerse the two rods in liquid sulfuric acid, you create a battery. Electrons will flow through the wire from the zinc rod to the carbon rod. Hydrogen gas builds up on the carbon rod, and over a fairly short period of time coats the majority of the carbon rod’s surface. The layer of hydrogen gas coating the rod blocks the reaction occurring in the cell and the battery begins to look “dead”. If you let the battery rest for awhile

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