Well this has been around long enough and we did have a couple of takers. All good answers and to be sure we should what out for:
1. Hydrogen – highly explosive at 4% or higher
2. Stibine
3. Arsine
4. Chlorine
2-4 are deadly if inhaled
So Terry gets some points on this one.
Antimony is added to the lead sulfate of the cathode plates to improve their durability and length of life. Hydrogenation of antimony during gassing produces stibine (SbH3), an explosive gas with a characteristic unpleasant odor, which dissociates rapidly at room temperature, and which acts toxicologically as a lower respiratory irritant and a hemolytic agent, with traces of antimony excreted in the urine.
An impurity in lead storage battery plates is arsenic, which forms arsine (AsH3) upon contact with nascent hydrogen; this gas is more stable than stibine, has a garlic-like odor and, after a delay of a day or two after exposure, causes such symptoms as malaise, dyspnea, headache, fainting, nausea and vomiting, dark urine, anemia, and jaundice. Arsine is spoken of as a "blood and nerve poison." Neither gas has been positively incriminated in the present day submarine.
And just so you know
Lead sulfide (also spelled sulphide) is a inorganic compound
Lead oxide is the chemical compound with the formula PbO. Lead oxide occurs in two forms: red, having a tetragonal crystal structure and yellow, having an orthorhombic crystal structure. Both forms occur naturally as minerals. Remember “Read Lead?”