Archive:000/Lead-acid batteries
Lead-acid batteries are an older technology used mostly as car batteries (gasoline-powered cars, to start the engine). Could they help solve the energy storage problem?
Viability
| #Need for lead | Maybe an issue |
| Toxicity | Probably an issue |
| #Suitable for electric vehicles? | Unknown |
| Charge/discharge losses | Inferior to other battery types |
| #Good enough for DIY projects? | Probably |
Need for lead
Lead is usually considered an abundant (cheap) metal - but apparently, not abundant enough to really scale up lead-acid batteries for on-grid energy storage:
Note: This is roughly the amount of on-grid energy consumption that we might need energy storage for. It consists of - for example - lighting, heating, appliances, and other energy used in homes and other buildings. We don't count industrial here, because we can assume (in principle) that most factories could operate during peak sunlight/wind, needing negligable energy storage.
(calculation loading) But lead resources are a lot higher than lead reserves, for some reason (see definition of the difference): (calculation loading) So from that perspective, lead is in fact abundant enough. However, we still need energy storage for electric vehicles, which we haven't counted so far.
Suitable for electric vehicles?
Lead-acid vehicles are already used in gasoline-powered vehicles, but you'd need to stack a lot more of them to make a fully electric vehicle. This might not be safe.[RESEARCH needed]
Good enough for DIY projects?
If you have some extra car batteries, may as well use them for a rooftop solar project. They probably won't store enough energy to power your whole home, but it's better than nothing.