Battery chemistry can be either acid or base (alkaline). An alkaline battery is an example of the latter. Those are the critters that are stocked in just about every kind of store there is. Remote controls, flashlights, etc. use them. An automotive battery is generally a lead-acid battery, and that's an example of the former battery type.
acid. you can actually run batteries off it.
It is acidic.
the amino acid in the batteries is NH3+
no lead acid batteries are not installed in factories only acid batteries are!!
The acid typically found in batteries is sulfuric acid.
Common automobile batteries are Lead/acid (dilute sulphuric acid) batteries.
Depends on your battery. In a lead-acid battery, like a 12V you find in most cars, sulfuric acid is used because hydrochloric acid will not form Pb304 (lead oxide). Pencil batteries are alkaline batteries and use a base instead of acid. However some batteries might accept HCL, just not most.
Most car batteries contain Sulphuric acid.
On standard unsealed lead-acid batteries, just unscrew the caps and refill if needed. This cannot be done on sealed lead-acid or gel cell lead-acid batteries. Dry cell batteries don't contain acid.
Dilute sulfuric acid is present in most batteries.
Lead-acid storage batteries contain sulfuric acid.
Sulfuric acid.