UPS Battery Sizing and Maintenance: A Practical Guide
Introduction #
Reliable UPS runtime depends on correct battery sizing and disciplined maintenance. This guide shows how to calculate required battery capacity, derate for real-world conditions, and run a preventative maintenance program.
Key Factors That Drive Runtime #
- Load power (kW) and power factor – determines kVA demand
- Battery type – VRLA, lithium-ion, NiCd have different energy density and life
- Temperature – every 10°C rise roughly halves VRLA life
- Age and cycle history – capacity fades over time
- UPS efficiency – online vs line-interactive vs standby
Sizing Batteries for Target Runtime #
Quick Formula #
Battery Wh = (Load W × Runtime hours) ÷ Efficiency
Example: 6 kW load, 30 minutes, 92% efficiency
Battery Wh = 6000 × 0.5 ÷ 0.92 ≈ 3260 Wh
Series/Parallel Planning #
- Choose DC bus voltage per UPS design (e.g., 48V, 192V).
- Determine strings in series to meet voltage, then parallel strings to meet Ah.
- Keep string count balanced; avoid mixing old and new strings.
Age and Temperature Derating #
- Age derating (VRLA):
-
Year 0–1: ~100%
- Year 2: ~85–90%
- Year 3: ~70%
- Year 4+: plan replacement
- **Temperature:** Use 20–25°C as reference; add margin if room runs warmer.
- VRLA (AGM/GEL): Lower cost, 3–5 year life, heavier, temp-sensitive
- Lithium-ion: Higher cost, lighter, 2–3× life, better high-temp tolerance
- NiCd: Rugged, good for harsh temps, but expensive and regulated
Maintenance Playbook (VRLA Focus) #
- Monthly: Visual inspection, check ambient temperature, alarm review
- Quarterly: String voltage checks, IR scan of terminations
- Annually: Load test or conductance test; clean terminals; verify torque
- Replacement: Plan at 3–5 years; avoid mixing ages in parallel strings
Runtime Testing Procedure #
- Charge batteries fully; note float voltage.
- Disconnect utility (or use test mode).
- Apply representative load; record runtime until threshold.
- Reconnect utility; confirm recharge current within spec.
- Log results and compare to previous tests.
Common Pitfalls #
- Using nameplate capacity without derating for age/temperature.
- Mixing old and new batteries in the same string.
- Ignoring power factor—runtime is based on kVA demand.
- Poor airflow; heat kills VRLA quickly.
Integration With Calculators #
- Use the UPS Runtime Calculator to estimate runtime given load, PF, and battery details.
- Use the Power Factor & kW/kVA Converter to get accurate kVA before sizing batteries.
Replacement Strategy and Budgeting #
- Track in-service dates per string; stagger replacements to spread cost.
- For critical sites, keep at least one spare string or rapid procurement plan.
- Consider lithium retrofit where high temp or space constraints exist.
Conclusion #
Accurate battery sizing plus disciplined maintenance prevents surprise runtime failures. Derate for age and heat, test quarterly, and plan replacements before capacity falls below requirements.