Current Electricity | Cells in Parallel

Current Electricity - Combination of Cells in Parallel

current electricity combination of cells in parallel is explained with equivalent EMF, equivalent internal resistance, terminal voltage, mixed combinations, V-I graphs, SVG diagrams, concept cards, mistake analysis and exam-level practice for CBSE, NEET, JEE Main, JEE Advanced, IB, IGCSE, ICSE and AP Physics.

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1. Complete Theory

Eeq = EFor N identical cells in parallel, equivalent EMF remains E.
req = r/NEquivalent internal resistance decreases.
I = E/(R+r/N)Current through external load R.
V = E - I(r/N)Terminal voltage of parallel combination.
V = IRLoad terminal potential difference.
P = I²RPower delivered to load.

Cells are connected in parallel to reduce equivalent internal resistance and supply larger current for a longer time without increasing the EMF. Parallel combination is preferred for low-resistance loads, backup systems, battery packs and circuits requiring stable terminal voltage.

Why parallel? Multiple cells share current, so each cell is less stressed.
Effect on EMF: for identical cells, EMF remains E, not NE.
Effect on internal resistance: internal resistances combine in parallel, so req = r/N.
Practical use: high-current devices and battery banks use parallel branches.
Advantage: lower voltage drop inside the battery combination.
Warning: cells must have nearly same EMF before connecting in parallel.

2. Main Derivation for N Identical Cells in Parallel

N Identical Cells in Parallel Connected to Load RE,rE,r...E,rRABI

Open Circuit Method

1
Remove external resistance R. No current flows through the external circuit, so the open-circuit potential difference is Vopen = E.
2
Deactivate all ideal voltage sources to find equivalent internal resistance. N equal internal resistances r are in parallel.
3
Therefore 1/req = N/r, so req = r/N.
4
Replace the parallel cell bank by an equivalent cell of EMF E and internal resistance r/N.
5
Apply Ohm's law to the complete circuit: I = E/(R+r/N).

3. Equivalent Circuit Method

Equivalent EMF: E, because all identical cells maintain the same terminal potential in parallel.
Equivalent internal resistance: r/N, because the internal paths are parallel paths for current sharing.
Equivalent CircuitEr/NRI = E/(R+r/N)

4. Mixed Combination: N Cells in Series, M Branches in Parallel

M Parallel Branches, Each Branch Has N Cells in Seriesbranch 1: N cells ⇒ nE, nrbranch M: N cells ⇒ nE, nr...R
1
Each branch has N cells in series, so branch EMF = NE and branch internal resistance = Nr.
2
M identical branches are in parallel, so equivalent EMF remains NE.
3
Equivalent internal resistance is req = Nr/M.
4
Current through load is I = NE/(R+Nr/M).

5. Terminal Voltage

For each real cell delivering current, terminal voltage follows V = E - Ir. For N identical cells in parallel, the equivalent internal resistance is r/N, so the combination terminal voltage is:

V = E - I(r/N)Terminal voltage of parallel combination.
V = IRLoad voltage.
V = ER/(R+r/N)After substituting current.

6. V-I Graph

Terminal Voltage V vs Current IIVY-intercept = Eslope = -r/N

Graph equation is V = E - I(r/N). The y-intercept gives EMF E. The magnitude of slope gives equivalent internal resistance r/N. Therefore, internal resistance of each cell is r = N × |slope|.

7. Common Student Errors

Mistake #1: assuming EMF becomes NE in parallel. Correct: Eeq = E.
Mistake #2: adding internal resistances. Correct: req = r/N.
Mistake #3: using series formula in parallel. Correct: I = E/(R+r/N).
Mistake #4: ignoring equivalent resistance. Always reduce the cell bank first.
Mistake #5: wrong sign convention. Terminal voltage drops with current: V = E - I(r/N).
Mistake #6: connecting unequal EMF cells directly in parallel without considering circulating current.

8-15. Exam Question Banks With Answers

CBSE 20 CBSE-Level Questions
  1. MCQ: For N identical cells in parallel, equivalent EMF is? Answer: E.
  2. MCQ: Equivalent internal resistance is? r/N.
  3. Numerical: E=2 V, r=1 Ω, N=4, R=3 Ω. Find I. I=2/(3+0.25)=0.615 A.
  4. Assertion: Parallel cells reduce internal resistance. Reason: internal paths are parallel. Both true.
  5. Subjective: Explain why EMF does not add in parallel. All terminals are at same potential difference.
  6. Case: Four cells supply a low-resistance load. Why parallel preferred? Lower internal loss.
  7. Find V if I=2 A, E=6 V, r=3 Ω, N=3. V=6-2(1)=4 V.
  8. What is graph slope? -r/N.
  9. Open circuit voltage? E.
  10. Why identical cells needed? To avoid circulating current.
  11. Terminal voltage formula? V=E-Ir/N.
  12. Load voltage formula? V=IR.
  13. When is parallel useful? Small R.
  14. What happens to battery life? Generally increases.
  15. Does current through each cell equal total current? No, ideally I/N.
  16. What is req for 5 cells? r/5.
  17. What is current for R≫r/N? Approximately E/R.
  18. What if one cell is weak? It may get charged or cause circulating current.
  19. State one application. Battery bank/high-current supply.
  20. Final rule? E same, r decreases.
NEET 25 NEET-Level Questions
  1. Equivalent EMF of identical parallel cells: E.
  2. Equivalent r of 10 cells: r/10.
  3. If R=0, current is? E/(r/N)=NE/r.
  4. Parallel cells are used to: reduce internal resistance.
  5. Slope of V-I graph: -r/N.
  6. Y-intercept: E.
  7. Formula for I: E/(R+r/N).
  8. Formula for terminal voltage: E-Ir/N.
  9. If N increases, req: decreases.
  10. If cells unequal, danger: circulating current.
  11. Low resistance load needs: parallel combination.
  12. Current shared by each cell ideally: I/N.
  13. Open circuit voltage: E.
  14. Power in load: I²R.
  15. Internal loss: I²r/N equivalent loss.
  16. Graph slope magnitude gives: r/N.
  17. To find r from slope m: r=Nm.
  18. EMF adds in parallel? No.
  19. r adds in parallel? No, reciprocal law.
  20. Best for high voltage? Series, not parallel.
  21. Best for high current? Parallel.
  22. Identical cells condition: same E and r.
  23. For R≫r/N current approx: E/R.
  24. For R small, parallel helps by: reducing internal drop.
  25. Main trap: using NE.
JEE Main 25 JEE Main Questions
  1. Derive I using Thevenin. Vth=E, Rth=r/N, so I=E/(R+r/N).
  2. Find N for req=r/8. N=8.
  3. If slope is -0.2 Ω and N=5, r=? 1 Ω.
  4. E=12 V, r=6 Ω, N=3, R=2 Ω. I=? 12/(2+2)=3 A.
  5. Terminal V for previous: IR=6 V.
  6. Internal drop: 6 V.
  7. Short current for previous bank: NE/r=6 A.
  8. Compare series vs parallel for R small. Parallel is better.
  9. Power in load expression: E²R/(R+r/N)².
  10. Maximum power condition: R=r/N.
  11. Pmax: E²N/(4r).
  12. Mixed bank current: NE/(R+Nr/M).
  13. Branch current ideally: I/M for M branches.
  14. Graph intercept 5 V means: E=5 V.
  15. Load voltage equals: IR.
  16. Equivalent circuit contains: E in series with r/N.
  17. Why low internal loss? smaller equivalent internal resistance.
  18. Unequal EMF issue: circulating current.
  19. If R tends infinity, V tends: E.
  20. If N tends infinity, req tends: 0.
  21. Ideal parallel bank current: E/R.
  22. Use of KVL: E=I(R+r/N).
  23. Power loss expression: I²r/N.
  24. Efficiency: R/(R+r/N).
  25. JEE trap: EMF does not multiply.
JEE Advanced 20 Difficult Problems
  1. Multiple identical cells in parallel with variable R: maximize power. R=r/N.
  2. Find Pmax. E²N/(4r).
  3. Mixed N-series M-parallel bank current. NE/(R+Nr/M).
  4. Graph slope -0.05 Ω with N=20. r=1 Ω.
  5. Unequal cell EMFs in parallel cause: circulating current before load.
  6. Two branches with same E but r1,r2 equivalent r. r1r2/(r1+r2).
  7. Find current sharing. inversely proportional to internal resistances.
  8. For one weak branch, current may reverse. Check terminal voltage.
  9. Thevenin voltage for identical parallel bank. E.
  10. Norton current. NE/r.
  11. Norton resistance. r/N.
  12. Power loss in each identical cell. (I/N)²r.
  13. Total internal loss. I²r/N.
  14. Efficiency at max power. 50%.
  15. Open circuit graph point. (I=0,V=E).
  16. Short circuit graph point. (I=NE/r,V=0).
  17. If N doubled, short current doubles. True.
  18. If N doubled, EMF unchanged. True.
  19. For fixed R, current increases with N but tends to E/R.
  20. Advanced conclusion: parallel improves current capacity, not voltage.
IB / IGCSE / ICSE / Case Studies 55 Questions

IB 15: data-analysis questions on V-I slope, uncertainty in r/N, battery-bank efficiency, graph intercept E, current sharing and experimental design. Answers use mark-scheme style: state formula, substitute, unit, conclusion.

IGCSE 15: simple questions on why cells are connected in parallel, why voltage remains same, why batteries last longer and how current is shared. Answers emphasize concept and safety.

ICSE 15: numericals on E, r, N, R, terminal voltage and equivalent internal resistance. Answers use I=E/(R+r/N).

10 Case Studies: battery bank for torch, inverter battery, low-resistance motor, parallel cells with graph data, mixed N-series M-parallel bank, weak cell in parallel, experimental V-I plot, short-circuit safety, current sharing, and maximum power. Each solution begins by reducing the bank to E and r/N.

16. Revision Sheet

Equivalent EMF: Eeq = E.
Equivalent internal resistance: req = r/N.
Current: I = E/(R+r/N).
Terminal voltage: V = E-Ir/N = IR.
Graph equation: V = E-I(r/N).
Graph meaning: intercept = E, slope = -r/N.
Mixed bank: Eeq = NE, req = Nr/M.
Important result: parallel increases current capacity, not EMF.
Maximum power: R = r/N and Pmax = E²N/(4r).

17. Final Revision Box

In a parallel combination of identical cells, the equivalent EMF remains equal to the EMF of one cell, but the equivalent internal resistance becomes r/N. This is why parallel cells are useful for low-resistance loads and high-current applications. The main formula is I = E/(R+r/N). Terminal voltage is V = E-I(r/N), and the V-I graph has y-intercept E and slope -r/N. Never write NE for parallel cells. Use NE only for cells in series or for a mixed branch that contains N cells in series.

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