Charging Lithium-ion
Charging and discharging batteries is a chemical reaction, but Li-ion is claimed as an exception. Here, battery scientists talk about energies flowing in and out as part of ion movement between anode and cathode. This claim has merits, but if the scientists were totally right then the battery would live forever, and this is wishful thinking. The experts blame capacity fade on ions getting trapped. For simplicity, we consider aging a corrosion that affects all battery systems. The Liion charger is a voltage-limiting device that is similar to the lead acid system. The difference lies in a higher voltage per cell, tighter voltage tolerance and the absence of trickle or float charge at full charge. While lead acid offers some flexibility in terms of voltage cutoff, manufacturers of Liion cells are very strict on the correct setting because Li-ion cannot accept overcharge. The so-called miracle charger that promises to prolong battery life and methods that pump extra capacity into the cell do not exist here. Li-ion is a clean system and only takes what it can absorb. Anything extra causes stress. Most cells charge to 4.20V/cell with a tolerance of +/50mV/cell. Higher voltages could increase the capacity, but the resulting cell oxidation would reduce service life. More important is the safety concern if charging beyond 4.20V/cell. Figure 1 shows the voltage and current signature as lithium-ion passes through the stages for constant current and topping charge.
Figure 1: Charge stages of lithium-ion. Li-ion is fully charged when the current drops to a predetermined level or levels out at the end of Stage 2. In lieu of trickle charge, some chargers apply a topping charge when the voltage drops to 4.05V/cell (Stage 4). Courtesy of Cadex The charge rate of a typical consumer Li-ion battery is between 0.5 and 1C in Stage 1, and the charge time is about three hours. Manufacturers recommend charging the 18650 cell at 0.8C or less. Charge efficiency is 97 to 99 percent and the cell remains cool during charge. Some Li-ion packs may experience a temperature rise of about 5C (9F) when reaching full charge. This could be due to the protection circuit and/or elevated internal resistance. Full charge occurs when the battery reaches the voltage threshold and the current drops to three percent of the rated current. A battery is also considered fully charged if the current levels off and cannot go down further. Elevated self-discharge might be the cause of this condition. Increasing the charge current does not hasten the full-charge state by much. Although the battery reaches the voltage peak quicker with a fast charge, the saturation charge will take longer accordingly. The amount of charge current applied simply alters the time required for each stage; Stage 1 will be shorter but the saturation Stage 2 will take longer. A high current charge will, however, quickly fill the battery to about 70 percent. Li-ion does not need to be fully charged, as is the case with lead acid, nor is it desirable to do so. In fact, it is better not to fully charge, because high voltages stresses the battery. Choosing a lower voltage threshold, or eliminating the saturation charge altogether, prolongs battery life but this reduces the runtime. Since the consumer market promotes maximum runtime, these chargers go for maximum capacity rather than extended service life.
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Some lower-cost consumer chargers may use the simplified charge-and-run method that charges a lithium-ion battery in one hour or less without going to the Stage 2 saturation charge. Ready appears when the battery reaches the voltage threshold at Stage 1. Since the state-of-charge (SoC) at this point is only about 85 percent, the user may complain of short runtime, not knowing that the charger is to blame. Many warranty batteries are being replaced for this reason, and this phenomenon is especially common in the cellular industry. Avoiding full charge has benefits, and some manufacturers set the charge threshold lower on purpose to prolong battery life. Table 2 illustrates the estimated capacities when charged to different voltage thresholds with and without saturation charge.
Charge time 120 min 135 min 150 min 165 min 180 min
Table 2: Typical charge characteristics of lithium-ion. Adding full saturation at the set voltage boosts the capacity by about 10 percent but adds stress due to high voltage. When the battery is first put on charge, the voltage shoots up quickly. This behavior can be compared to lifting a heavy weight with an elastic band. The lifting arm moves up quickly but the weight lags behind. The voltage of the charging battery will only catch up when the battery is almost fully charged (see Figure 3. This charge characteristic is typical of all batteries.
Figure 3: Capacity as a function of charge voltage on a lithium-ion battery The capacity trails the charge voltage, like lifting a heavy weight with an elastic band. Courtesy of Cadex
Relying on the closed circuit voltage (CCV) to read the available capacity during charge is impractical. The open circuit voltage (OCT) can, however, be used to predict state-of-charge after the battery has rested for a few hours. The rest period calms the agitated battery to regain equilibrium. Similar to all batteries, temperature affects the OCV. Read "How to Measure State-of-Charge". Li-ion cannot absorb overcharge, and when fully charged the charge current must be cut off. A continuous trickle charge would cause plating of metallic lithium, and this could compromise safety. To minimize stress, keep the lithium-ion battery at the 4.20V/cell peak voltage as short a time as possible. Once the charge is terminated, the battery voltage begins to drop, and this eases the voltage stress. Over time, the open-circuit voltage will settle to between 3.60 and 3.90V/cell. Note that a Li-ion battery that received a fully saturated charge will keep the higher voltage longer than one that was fast-charged and terminated at the voltage threshold without a saturation charge. If a lithium-ion battery must be left in the charger for operational readiness, some chargers apply a brief topping charge to compensate for the small self-discharge the battery and its protective circuit consume. The charger may kick in when the open-circuit voltage drops to 4.05V/cell and turn off again at a high 4.20V/cell. Chargers made for operational readiness, or standby mode, often let the battery voltage drop to 4.00V/cell and recharge to only 4.05V/cell instead of the full 4.20V/cell. This reduces voltage-related stress and prolongs battery life. Some portable devices sit in a charge cradle in the on position. The current drawn through the device is called the parasitic load and can distort the charge cycle. Battery manufacturers advise against parasitic load because it induces mini-cycles. The battery is continuously being discharged to 4.20V/cell and then charged by the device. The stress level on the battery is especially high because the cycles occur at the 4.20V/cell threshold. A portable device must be turned off during charge. This allows the battery to reach the set threshold voltage unhindered, and enables terminating charge on low current. A parasitic load confuses the charger by depressing the battery voltage and preventing the current in the saturation stage to drop low. A battery may be fully charged, but the prevailing conditions prompt a continued charge. This causes undue battery stress and compromises safety. Battery professionals agree that charging lithium-ion batteries is simpler and more straightforward than nickel-based systems. Besides meeting the voltage tolerances, the charge circuits are relatively simple. Limiting voltage and observing low current in triggering ready is easier than analyzing complex signatures that may change with age. Charge currents with Li-ion are less critical and can vary widely. Any charge will do, including energy from a renewable resource such as a solar panel or wind turbine. Charge absorption is very high and with a low and intermittent charge, charging simply takes a little longer without negatively affecting the battery. The absence of trickle charge further helps simplify the charger.
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Overcharging Lithium-ion
Lithium-ion operates safely within the designated operating voltages; however, the battery becomes unstable if inadvertently charged to a higher than specified voltage. Prolonged charging above 4.30V forms plating of metallic lithium on the anode, while the cathode material becomes an oxidizing agent, loses stability and produces carbon dioxide (CO2 ). The cell pressure rises, and if charging is allowed to continue the current interrupt device (CID) responsible for cell safety disconnects the current at 1,380kPa (200psi). Should the pressure rise further, a safety membrane bursts open at 3,450kPa (500psi) and the cell might eventually vent with flame. The thermal runaway moves lower when the battery is fully charged; for Li-cobalt this threshold is between 130150CC (266302F), nickel-manganese-cobalt (NMC) is 170180C (338 356F), and manganese is 250C (482F). Li-phosphate enjoys similar and better temperature stabilities than manganese. Lithium-ion is not the only battery that is a safety hazard if overcharged. Lead- and nickel-based batteries are also known to melt down and cause fire if improperly handled. Nickel-based batteries have also been recalled for safety concerns. Properly designed charging equipment is paramount for all battery systems.
Over-discharging Lithium-ion
Li-ion should never be discharged too low, and there are several safeguards to prevent this from happening. The equipment cuts off when the battery discharges to about 3.0V/cell, stopping the current flow. If the discharge continues to about 2.70V/cell or lower, the batterys protection circuit puts the battery into a sleep mode. This renders the pack unserviceable and a recharge with most chargers is not possible. To prevent a battery from falling asleep, apply a partial charge before a long storage period. Battery manufacturers ship batteries with a 40 percent charge. The low charge state reduces aging-related stress while allowing some self-discharge during storage. To minimize the current flow for the protection circuit before the battery is sold, advanced Li-ion packs feature a sleep mode that disables the protection circuit until activated by a brief charge or discharge. Once engaged, the battery remains operational and the on state can no longer be switched back to the standby mode. Do not recharge lithium-ion if a cell has stayed at or below 1.5V for more than a week. Copper shunts may have formed inside the cells that can lead to a partial or total electrical short. If recharged, the cells might become unstable, causing excessive heat or showing other anomalies. Li-ion packs that have been under stress are more sensitive to mechanical abuse, such as vibration, dropping and exposure to heat.
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Comments
On November 10, 2010 at 3:39am
Adley wrote:
Super post there! Comprehensive and w ell collated material. Thanks for sharing.
Grosser wrote:
Very usefull information here, good thing I fond this page first before designing a charger for my custom-made battery pack.
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P.S. Youre alw ais talking about a 4,2V like they are the the standardw hat about 3,6V cells?
Jason wrote:
Facinating stuff, although I doubt I w ill ever have the ambition to put it use.
Mike wrote:
Grosser, 3.6 is the nominal delivery voltage of a Li-ion cell, w hile 4.2 is the max charging voltage. They are the same battery. Its the same situation w ith other battery chemistries, e.g. for a 12V lead-acid battery, youd be charging to ~14V
Eduardo wrote:
I need to do the follow ing test: 1 Question; Have my charge Battery is Full. How time (day) can battery disconnect? and 2 Questions What time need battery recharge for has charge Full ?. PD: My pow er Supply is 3,7 volt
Eduardo wrote:
Thak You, unansw er. The Batery is connected circuit 3,6 volt constant (regulable according to load) and this support a circuit for memory and a processor primary.
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How w ould the graph look if it w ere for vehicles?
Andy wrote:
Ive inherited an electric vehicle pow ered by tw o 38V/90Ah lithium-ion batteries. The voltage of both packs read around 9V only! The engine management system reports that a mere 21 hours of operation have been logged thus far. Are these battery packs truly dead-DEAD or is it possible to resuscitate them again in one w ay or another? Please advise. Cheers.
Mr. D wrote:
how can you trickle charge a 12v batt @ 2v trickle and get a full charge . the battery is like a tank, w ith a limitation of it"s rateing ie. 4.2v or 12v ,is the limit that the battery w ill hold, forceing anything over that w ill start to burn the core of the battery in one w ay or the other ... do i w in a cuppie doll??
Vass wrote:
@ Flynn Siy, the ratings of the charger mentioned misguiding me as the standard charger rating should be in terms of volts and Amps/milli amps(mA) but not in mAh. If your concern is about a charger(ill interpret it to 500mA/12mA ) then go for 1200mA. Theres no harm in it. If you go for 500mA, itll charge but it become hot due to its inability to supply the rating current(say 1000mA).This inturn drop the voltage. If your concern is about a battery(a standard battery rating w ill be in volts and mAh), go for either one but in reduction in back up, in case if you chose 500mAh.Hope it cleared your doubt. Cheers, Vass.
Shiwakoti wrote:
How Li-ion battery gets recharged? Why at elevated temperature the battery life gets shortened? Does frequent charging pratice w ithout being fully discharged affect bttery life span? Plz help..
Ike wrote:
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My HTC EVO cellphone shuts dow n w hen the discharge voltage reaches 3.6 volts. Isnt this reducing the use-capacity of this battery quite a bit? This is to protect the battery: further discharge could destabilize it and next charging could be risky (you may have heard of exploding LiIon batteries). Despite more strict cutoff liit, LiIons can store more energy than previous technologies iin same cell size, so you should not consider this a design fault/draw back, just a essential characteristic feature of this different chemistry. Shiw akoti, you w ill find answ ers to your questions on the articles at this site: esp. in Is lithium-ion the ideal battery?. Shortly said, elevated temperature speeds up battery aging (its a chemical reaction a bit like how iron rusts faster in humid climate compared to dry circumstances) and its MUCH better to recharge often than let LiIons drain fully.
Shiwakoti wrote:
Thanks for the answ er..
STEYAERT.DANIEL wrote:
GOED UITGELEGDE TEKST
Mike wrote:
So in this article is states that Lithium Ion batterys are charged upto 4.2v, w here each cell can handle 4.2v +/- .05v. So the upperbound here is 4.25v to 4.15v. So, if you have a charger that is push the cells to 4.21v or 4.22v, then it is theoretically fine. A continuous trickle charge above 4.05V/cell w ould causes plating of metallic lithium that could lead to instabilities and compromise safety. Here though you say that raising the cell above just over 4v may cause plating. So by specification, charging lithium ion cells to 4.2v w ill cause plaiting?
captainirmak wrote:
i observe (via an application) that my smartphone is reaching till 4191 volts during re-charging the battery by usb cable. can w e say that battery is died a bit? cos it is not reaching 4.2 or above. i know that it is very small numbers but curious about it. and also w hat shold i do max charge the battery?
Ken wrote:
The article mentions how dangerous it is to attempt charging cells that have been @<1.5v for just a few days. Well, that has not been in agreement w ith my experience. I occasionally salvage discarded Li-ion laptop battery packsdisassembling them to harvest the 18650s for personal r/c and flashlight use. I commonly pull cells that are totally flat: 0v, sometimes even w ith polarity reversed by a few millivolts. In addition, some of the battery packs I ripped into w ere prehistoric by lithium chemistry standards (10 years+). More often than not all cells w ould recharge to their FULL original rated capacity and perform as new . I alw ays test each cell individually w ith my iMAX B6 charger, manually putting them through at least a couple 500mA to 1Amp discharge/charge cycles. I have *never* experienced any safety nor reliability issues to date. I w ould also like to brag of having had success restoring substantial capacity to the occasional cells that truly w ere w orn. I w ill never share my method_ITS MINE !_do not ask. ...Additionally, that procedure IS potentially dangerous and requires mandatory attentive supervision. I suppose Ive been laughing all the w ay to the battery bank. I know , horrible joke!
TAS wrote:
What i have believed is keeping my laptop plugged in all the time at my desk and using the battery pow er in case of pow er failure or so. We have very frequent pow er cut-dow ns for brief spans. I also use BatteryCare to notify me of recalibration. AFAIK Li-ion does not have memory effect and they have PMS circuit built-in so dont overcharge. A vendor of notebooks recently opposed and recommended to cycle discharges and recharges regularly to keep the battery healthy and prolong its life. Whats the bottom line?
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On February 11, 2011 at 1:32pm
tas wrote:
What i have believed is keeping my laptop plugged in all the time at my desk and using the battery pow er in case of pow er failure or so does no harm to my battery pack. We have very frequent pow er cut-dow ns for brief spans. I also use BatteryCare to notify me of recalibration. AFAIK Li-ion does not have memory effect and they have PMS circuit built-in so dont overcharge. A vendor of notebooks recently opposed and recommended to cycle discharges and recharges regularly to keep the battery healthy and prolong its life. Whats the bottom line?
Dan wrote:
Mike, I have been thinking of doing some EV experiments using some old laptop cells. They flat and packaged in plastic bags. What do you think about using this type of cell?
Edward wrote:
i got a new phone. and it says b4 i do anything, i need to charge it for a total of 12 hours for it 2 run right, and battery life, blah blah. but my question is, simple and plain do i need to really charge it for the full 12 hours? can i just charge it until it says 100% charged, w hich w ould be in a hour or tw o. ive googled my question, and ive read mixed answ ers yes you should no, you dont have to, because its a lithium-ion w hoop this, and w hoop that.. i w ould jus like a simpe answ er.. yes or no and w hy? Thanx yous
Samer wrote:
hi, i w ould like to know about the first charge lithium baattery ? should i live chargim for 24h ? thanks
Betty wrote:
Thanks so much. All the new gadgets (laptops, cell phones, portable TV-DVD kits, etc) dont specify anything about the Battery rules like they used to in the day of NiCad and NiMH. This article is very VERY informative and helpful. NOW, i better start unplugging my laptop thought i w as saving the battery by keeping it plugged in w hile using. I guess i probably shouldnt be charging my cell phone overnight for 8+hours either?
Ken wrote:
Great article, very informative. Can anyone help me w ith the follow ing: I have a Gibson Robot Guitar, the manufacturer states that it runs on: (2 x 14500) 2.4v 2100mAh lithium rechargeable battery system. These batteries have been run dow n for some time now and do charge, the manufacturer cannot replace them. How can the voltage be 2.4v w hen the minimum cell voltage for lithium batteries is 3.6v What should I buy to replace these?
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On February 28, 2011 at 11:14pm
BJ McGeever wrote:
So should I do my best to keep the battery at 40%? For instance Ive been letting it hover around 40% by continually plugging and unplugging it. Is that a good idea?
Isidor wrote:
This article has been updated as of March 10, 2011 w ith all new information. Enjoy!
Robert wrote:
Nice w ork Isidor. Thank you.
TAS wrote:
What i have believed is keeping my laptop plugged in all the time at my desk and using the battery pow er in case of pow er failure or so does no harm to my battery pack. We have very frequent pow er cut-dow ns for brief spans. I also use BatteryCare to notify me of recalibration. AFAIK Li-ion does not have memory effect and they have PMS circuit built-in so dont overcharge. A vendor of notebooks recently opposed and recommended to cycle discharges and recharges regularly to keep the battery healthy and prolong its life. Whats the bottom line?
Subbu wrote:
Hi, I have a simple ARM7 gadget and I w ant to run it on the Li-ion batteries w hich are available cheap. Is there any singly IC chip solution w hich could a. Charge the battery w hen connected to mains/ USB b. Indicate the content of charge to ARM7 (ARM7 can query and stop w orking if there is no charge left to function properly) With best regards, Subbu.
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Francisco Bolivar wrote:
I have an elerctric bike w ith a 600w - 36v motor. It uses a li-Ion battery.
Usually each time I use the bike its charge drops about 20% of the total battery charge. WHAT IS BETTER DO DO: 1 - CHARGE THE BATTERY EACH TIME I USE THE BYKE (battery w ith 80% of charge) 2 - CHARGE THE BATTERY ONLY WHEN IT REACHS 60% OR 40% OF CHARGE
JimQ wrote:
I w ould like to make a battery pack charger for 4 Li ion cells. Would it be detrimental to limiting the charger voltage to ..say..15 volts. This w ould be w ithin the voltage limit for each cell if the distribution is even.. How ever, if a cell is shorted there w puld be excessove voltage on the other cells in the series string. Would it be better to design the charger for 4.0 volt peak and charger the 4 cells in parallel?
Hemanth wrote:
How to remove the charging time li ion battery ? Is there any alternatives w ay ?
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On April 12, 2011 at 4:54am
Erik wrote:
Why can the the battery pack in a Tesla automobile be charged considerably faster w hen the charging unit is 240v vs. 110-120v? I iam a complete novice, and am w ondering if higher voltage input decreases charging time. Thanks for any insight you can offer.
Jayk wrote:
I am unable to decide w hich is better - to select a Li-ion battery pack w ith multiple cells or single cell. For example, how to choose betw een a 3.7V, 1500mAhr and a 7.4V, 1500mAhr ?
Alex wrote:
Amazing w ebsite w ell w ritten .. very very useful Great Job
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nash wrote:
Great article!!
zz wrote:
w hat happens if you let a li-ion battery connected indefinitely at 4.0V?
Ryan wrote:
So I am building a solar pow ered usb charger for an android device. I know that my available curent and voltage at the time of charging w ill vary depending on the panel so in addition to overcharging I am w ondering if capacitors to buffer pow er is necessary. I have also considered a 3000mAh battery w ith an integrated charging circuit w ould be better. That w ould offer me more consistent ouput to the device and be a contingency for a lack of or poor lighting. Any ideas w ould help. Kudos on the page, very informative.
mike wrote:
Great article. Well w ritten and very informative - just w hat i w as looking for. Thanks and keep up the excellent w ork.
JimQ wrote:
Great informative article. For a 12volt pack, I w ould charge 3 or for Li Ion cells w ith a constant current source and limit the volts per cell by connecting a 4.0 volt zener diode across each cell. This w ould allow parallel charging but also protect the cells from over voltage. Does this make sense? The total charging current w ould be limited by the charging source circuitry and shut off after all cells reached 4.0 volts.
TONY wrote:
Li-Ion (Poli)bat Min V=2.7V ? 3.0V Midle=3.6-3.7 (Li-Ion Li-Pol) end of Charging 4.2V Sel Kill 4.3V+ Kill it Fast 4.35 +
TONY wrote:
Higher charge voltages boost capacity but low er cycle life and compromise safety. Li-ion battery to 4.20V/cell. This allow s maximum runtime We have limited information by how much low er charge voltages prolong battery life; this depends on many conditions, as w e have learned. What w e do know , how ever, is the capacities. At a charge to 4.10V/cell, the battery holds a capacity that is about 10 percent less than going all the w ay to 4.20V/cell. In terms of optimal longevity, a charge voltage limit of 3.92V/cell w orks best but the capacity w ould be low . Besides selecting the best-suited voltage thresholds, it is also important that the battery does not stay in the high-voltage stage for a long time and is allow ed to drop after full charge has been reached. V4.20 end of Charging 100 MA (Panasonic ?)
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TONY wrote:
4.20 400+ capacity 80% 4.25 400 bat capacity 25% 4.3v 250 Cycles 50% 4.35v 190 Cycles 25%
Skip wrote:
My laptop has a battery rated at 10.8V, 85Wh, 8800mAh. The charger outputs 18.5V, 3.5A, and 65W. I have an old charger that is rated 19V, 3.4A and 65W. Would it be safe to use the old one?
Andrea wrote:
Hi, i w ant to charge a 7.5 v 400 mAh li-ion battery from a small solar panel (6V - 1W). I w ould connect the solar panel and the battery w ith a voltage regulator or w ith a MPP circuit that fixed the output voltage adjusting the output current of the solar panel catching alw ays the maximum pow er from it. In this w ay its difficult charge the battery using the constant current/constant voltage method because i cant control the charge current and i havent enough pow er from the solar panel. In conclusion the charging of the battery is done w ith a small and variable charge current. Is that a problem? Can i charge the battery alw ays in slow charge fase and w ith a variable current? If yes, w hich are the draw backs? Thank you. regards! Andrea
Roy wrote:
Excellent!!! Love the detail!
edy wrote:
w hy lithium can perform fast charging betw een range 20% to 80% SOC only? Why after 80% SOC charging became slow ?
Joseph wrote:
My son and I have the same cell phone. His battery charge lasts 1 days and mine only one day. I came here to find out w hy. We thought it w as because I w as charging too frequently. I now believe its because I alw ays left the phone on w hile charging w hereas he turns his off. Thanks for the info!
Joseph wrote:
oops! 5 days vs 1 day
Nolan wrote:
Great article, thanks for the w riteup. One question: Would charging a Lithium battery w ith a higher amperage charger (but same voltage) cause any damage to the battery? Im looking at +300mA to +500mA increase.
Craig wrote:
Hello, I have a cell phone w ith a lithium battery. Is it true that it is better to let the battery almost completely die before charging? I w as told the battery has a memory. Someone also told me that w as only true w ith NiCd.
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On June 20, 2011 at 8:03am
determan wrote:
Hello, my protected 18650 cell faced a high current draw and the protection circuit w ent to sleep mode.. the cell now measures just 0V!.. Do anyone know how can I w ake up such a cell?.. Your help w ill highly be appreciated.. thanks..
Javier wrote:
Hey, very good article. 1. Where it says The battery is continuously being discharged to 4.20V/cell and then charged by the device I think you mean The battery is continuously being CHARGED to 4.20V/cell and then DISCHARGED by the device 2.Its ok to charge to a safe level, say 80% (thus preventing minicycles and overcharging the battery) w ith the device on? 3.How can you tell if the charger and/or the device has taken measures to prevent minicycles,overcharges,etc..?
mit wrote:
Very vey thaks. Usefull informations.
Amkul wrote:
Hi everyone I just w anna ask some of the experts here, w hether its is OK for me to charge a lithium-ion battery (lets say a 2Ah), w ith a constant current of 50mA and a float voltage of 4.1V? Despite the slow charging rate (longer time of course), w ould this w ork and w ould there be any other problems?
JC22 wrote:
So, let me just make sure i have this straight. I am building a charger and here is my w hat i am doing: 1. When battery is first connected charge at c/5 (as recommended by battery manu) 2. While in this stage continually read the voltage i am charging at to produce this current. (Question here: is this correct? or do i need to shut off my charge voltage and w ait about a second for voltage to settle to battery voltage then read?) 3. When the voltage i am CHARGING at hits 4.2 at this current i charge at a constant 4.2 volts from this point on until the current drops below c/100 (as recommended by battery manu), or the total charge time exceeds 10hrs (as recommended by manu). 4. When my current hits this low i simply cut out the charge. Question - should i float the charge line at some value after charge? So, basically i just w ant to make sure my method is basically correct. Am i reading the correct voltage to determine w hen to stop fast charging and w hen i am fully charged should i just leave the charge line at high impedence or should i float it to some value?
jin wrote:
again, huge amount of misleading info here doesnt mean everything is w rong. The author actually read these comments, but doesnt reply to them, as he has deleted my previous post regarding the reliability of the info presented in this page.
jin wrote:
To JC22: 2, you dont need to cut off your charging voltage to see the stage of your battery. 3, no true; you are risking over-charging the battery at c/100 and more than 10 hours.
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4, you shouldnt float charge a lithium battery
5, When you are fully charged w hich shouldnt be, you are not a battery. you should just stop risking over-charging yourself.
jin wrote:
To Amkul: You can charge w ith low current, but you shouldnt float charge it. float charge means keep charging w ithout stop; you have cut the charging current w hen this current is low er than 50ma; or you risk over-charge your battery.
jin wrote:
to Javier: 1, yes, you are right. 2, It is totally fine. 3, there is no w ay you can tell; other than taking apart the charger and reconstruct the circuitry yourself.
jin wrote:
To determan: If your battery doesnt charge up in the charger, the circuit probably is damaged.
jin wrote:
To Craig: You can charge lithium any time; memory effect is for the very old nicd only.
jin wrote:
To Nolan: You can, but never charge w ith more than 1C; and that is if you have a 1800mah battery; you shouldnt charge it w ith 1.8A (1800ma);
jin wrote:
Joseph: It is not true; If you use your cell more than your son; then obviously it w ill last shorter.
jin wrote:
I am afraid that you cant charge a 7.5V battery w ith only 6v solar panel. You need 8.35V, so you need a dc to dc booster w ith regulation,but charging the battery w ith variable current is fine.
jin wrote:
To skip: It depends on the charger; but if the output voltage of those 2 charges is more than 12.3 Volt, both are not safe to charge your 10.8v battery.
jin wrote:
To Ryan: Your battery is your buffer. no cap is needed.
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On August 12, 2011 at 3:09pm
jin wrote:
To zz: You w ill over-charge the battery. It w ill expose eventually. zz w rote: w hat happens if you let a li-ion battery connected indefinitely at 4.0V?
jin wrote:
TO MICHEL KUN: As I know , PSP uses 5 volts pow er source. This either means that there is an internal circuit in the battery that boost the voltage from 4.2 to 5+ volts; or the battery is not made out of lithium. Either case, your battery should be safe to use.
jin wrote:
To Jayk: Depends on your needed voltage and pow er; higher voltage means higher voltage and higher pow er stored. Jayk w rote: I am unable to decide w hich is better - to select a Li-ion battery pack w ith multiple cells or single cell. For example, how to choose betw een a 3.7V, 1500mAhr and a 7.4V, 1500mAhr ?
Garry D wrote:
An enterpreneor claiming, new technology can charge Lithium Ion Battery can charge eight times more life ???? Comments Please ???
zz wrote:
you mean explode interesting, I figured current must be 0 once voltages equalise, so no overcharge
jin wrote:
To zz: w e are not in a perfect w orld. The charging voltage maybe more than 4.20, w hich means there is current going into the battery, and explode it eventually. On the other hand, due to the age of the cell itself, it may not has its maximun capacity voltage of 4.2. Normally w hen you charge the cell to 4.2 volt, it w ill drop a little bit. If a 4.2 volt charging current is kept charging that battery, eventually heats and pressure w ill built up and explode the battery.
jin wrote:
To Garry D, Yes. technically, it is possible.
ray wrote:
if i have a 3.7volts li-ion battery w hat is the output specification of my battery charger?
Garry D wrote:
Which new company has come up w ith this 8 times more life For Lithium Ion Rechargable Battery.
zz wrote:
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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you misunderstood the question
Sherri wrote:
Im really not clear.. I have a Dell laptop w hich I only use at home. Should I leave it plugged in? should I only plug it in w hen it needs to be charged? I have noticed that it has been getting very hot and at times the charger seems hot. We have been leaving it plugged in most days, then unplug it at night. Thank you for clarifying for me!
zz wrote:
Most likely 4.2V, but it is also limited in current. jin, the charging voltage is 4V, no more
jin wrote:
TO ray: Output of your charger should be 4.2V at 200mA-1000mA
jin wrote:
@ray 4.2V at 100ma-1000ma
jin2 wrote:
4.2V at 100mA-1000mA
jin2.0 wrote:
To ray : 4.2V at 100mA-1000mA
zz wrote:
Most likely 4.2V, but it is also limited in current. jin, you misunderstood my question
Itamir wrote:
Thank you very much. It helps me a lot. Very good material.
zz wrote:
Most likely 4.2V, but it is also limited in current. jin, you misunderstood my question
zz wrote:
Probably 4.2V, but it is also limited in current.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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jin, you misunderstood my question
satyendra wrote:
hi evry1.. for my application of voltage(72V) , i connected 23 li-ion cells in series. each cell have 90 AH of capacity.now each and every cells have voltage have 3.3V. so my question is that how w ould i know that w hat is the current SoC of the cells. and second question is w hile charging it w hen current starts decreasing, at till w hat point of current i should w ait for the complete charge.
Mark Z. wrote:
Is slow charging (via USB-Port) better then fast charging (w all plug)?
Garry D wrote:
Ive not heard of any entrepreneur but there is a team of scientist at the DOE w ho are on the verge of expanding capacity 8x http://w w w .labspaces.net/113675/Better_lithium_ion_batteries_are_on_the_w ay
Peter wrote:
Great article, helped a lot. Do you have by chance a similar article about proper discharging a Li-ion cell? Im especially interested in detecting the low er threshold w here discharging should be stopped. A diagram similar to the one here w ould help a lot. Would you detect voltage? If yes, w hat is the low threshold? Would you detect internal resistance? (If the latter, how ?)
zz wrote:
Probably 4.2V, and also limited in current. Better measure. jin, youve misunderstood
tosvus wrote:
I bought a Li-ion battery/pack w ith charger (in the form of an adapter). Unfortunately, I mixed it up w ith another adapter, so I used a 12V-1.5a charger instead of the 12.6V-0.350A I should have used. I noticed that the battery only outputs 9V max now , w ith charge dropping rapidly. Did I permanently damage it?
priya wrote:
hello sir i w ant to charge a 1.5v cells used in dc pumps by sw itching it to main supply
zz wrote:
probably 4.2V, but it is also limited in current. you misunderstood the question jin
Postelle wrote:
Wow , jin is really smart? Maybe she should be the one w riting the articles!
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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On October 28, 2011 at 9:52am
Ed wrote:
I have a Toshiba C655-S5056 laptop w ith li-ion battery. Specs say 6 cells, 48Wh. The AC adapter is 65W (19V, 3.42 A). The laptop is dead and I w ant to manually charge the battery to determine if the problem is the dc jack. Can I remove the battery and connect it directly to the adapter for an hour to partially charge the battery? I know its not safe to leave it connected. I just w ant to charge it enough to pow er up the laptop for a few minutes before I go to the trouble of replacing the dc jack. Thank you. erb2000@gmail.com
Tony wrote:
I w ant to use 3 AAA size of these in series in a headphone amplifier. There is no chemical recombination applicable as in NiCd or NiMH, they are more like capacitors in that w ay. So it seems they cant be charged in series. It w ould quickly ruin the low est capacity one. Is this correct? Can you suggest some really simple but safe w ay of charging them, one at a time if necessary, using only a regulated variable pow er supply w ith constant current limiting, a good quality analogue multimeter (Avometer) and maybe a resistor? I dont need anyw here near maximum capacity. Are they easily damaged if the strongest ones reverses the w eakest and therefore should be protected w ith diodes maybe? Can you suggest any good information about using them in series? Sorry, I should be paying you a consultancy fee for this lot! Thanks.
Nitesh wrote:
Dear sir, I am using the 3.7V/3700mA li-ion battery for my electronic instrument. this battery gets dry after some time. Then i have to remove battery from ckt and directly connect it to the adaptor(4.1v/1500mA). but that is not possible to do all the time. Please suggest the solution.
Niel wrote:
Interesting article. I have just started using li ion, and the charger I have charges to a voltage of 4.10 volts. I have a lot of experience w ith li po and the charger uses 4.20 volts as the cutoff for that variety. According to the article, I guess thats a good idea. I just found it a little unusual. Thanks for the info.
Terry C wrote:
How can I reset my Li ion 14.4 Hilti battery, peeps say it can be done I only get one single green light and no charge need help on this please, Thank you
Twoone wrote:
I am w orking w ith an off grid dc motor that requires 48v and 250 ah and i plan for 24 hrs running. I plan to connect to lithium ion battery bank to store energy for later usage. Let say batteries are in series of 4 it means about 12 v. So how many battery shall i have and w hat is the charger size.? Anybody advise? Tq.
voon wrote:
yes i have the same question as ray. my charger specifications are output 5v, 700mA. My battery is 3.7v 1500 mAh li-ion battery if i w ant to avoid entering stage 2(saturation charge) region, at w hat % should i stop charging at? is it 85% w hich is cut off capacity at 4.2 V/cell, or perhaps somew here near 60% w hich is cut off capacity at 3.7 V/cell? thanks for any help
Ali wrote:
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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Is it better to charge the Li Pp/Li On faster or slow er as I have a variable current charger
Gary wrote:
Im having a discussion w ith someone on a forum. Its going like this: Ive got 4 7.4v batteries. 2x1000mah + 2x1200mah Im parallel charging them at 8.4v, no balancing at this point. The charger hits 8.4v and cuts off w hen the current draw drops below a certain point. My understanding is that each battery w ill saturate at 8.4v line and no further current w ill enter a saturated battery. Hes of the opinion that Im probably screw ing up my batteries. Anyone have some info? THanks
Anand wrote:
Thanks for this w onderful info! really helps
David wrote:
I have a Lipo battery (11.1V 3 cell / 1100maH) w hich I have a 12V AC adpator to DC charger w ith a amp regulator from 0-4 Amps. Firstly can I charge the battery higher than 1100maH or does it have to be low ersecondly it has been on for hours at 1000maH but still it doesnt charge it? What is w rong? Thank you
Vince wrote:
Regarding Figure 1: Current is listed as being in Amps (A), but is this a typo? Should it be C, w here C is the number of amps that w ould discharge a cell in one hour? For example, I have a 3500mAh cell for my Droid phone, so w ould not C equal 3.5A? Is 3.5A then the amount I w ould w ant to use to initially charge my cell until its voltage reaches 4.2V, at w hich point the cell itself w ill determine how much current it draw s? The article later states The charge rate of a typical consumer Li-ion battery is betw een 0.5 and 1C in Stage 1. I w ould LOVE to have that, but cant find ANY! So is this another typo in the opposite direction? Did they mean betw een 0.5 and 1A instead of C? Because thats the range most charges seem to max out at. I have one charger that outputs 300ma (w hich is 0.085C), a few 500ma, and 800ma, and one that does a full 1A, but even that one is only 0.3C. These take TOO LONG to charge my cells. To Ryan w ho posted on May 3, 2011, how s your project going? That is my need also. I w ill be backpacking for a few w eeks w ith my Droid. I have four 3500mAh cells, and a 10W solar charger. If 1C for my cells is 3.5A, at 4.2V that w ould be 14.7W, so my solar panels w ill never be able to provide more than the battery should be able to handle. Right??? The problem is that I can never count on ideal sunlight, so I pretty much w ant to pump everything the panel can generate straight into the cell. How ever, all of my adapters that output 4.2V have severe current restrictions as I mentioned above, so I dont think I can get a full charge from the sunlight available. Any advice???
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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Vince wrote:
No, that is not bad, and sometimes is necessary.
If your draw is less than the charger is putting out, then pow er from the cord is going both to the phone and the battery. But if you are draw ing more than the cord can supply, then the phone is draw ing from both the cord and the battery. In extreme cases, the charger may not be able to keep up w ith the draw from the phone, for example if you are providing a w ifi hotspot, recording a HD video w ith the light on, and geotracking your position simultaneously, all w hile trying to sling mad birds at sw ine, your battery may continue to discharge even w hile plugged in, but thats the only w ay to make it last as long as possible. The battery w ill charge fastest w hen phone is turned off because all of the pow er from the cord can be directed to charging the battery instead of also running the phone, but that is not practical for most people. Same goes for laptops.
Vince wrote:
Another clarification that I think should be understood: The thing that plugs into the w all at one end and your phone at the other end is not really the charger. The charger is inside the phone. The w all cord provides 5v to the phone, and the charger inside the phone provides 4.2v to the battery. Although there are (and I have one) actual chargers, w here you take the battery out of the phone and set it in the charger, w hich plugs into the w all. The difference is that a charger is (or should be) smart enough to first supply a conditioning charge, then a constant current, and finally a constant voltage, and preferably a shutoff. The charger in the phone does this. The cord from the w all to the phone is not smart, it just provides a constant 5v.
Vince wrote:
From w hat Ive learned from these w ebsites, here are the answ ers: First to your last question: What is really best is to keep your battery around half charged, 40%, 3.7v. So if youre fully charged, its best to unplug it regardless of w hat youre doing, and if it drops to less than those numbers, plug it back in. Tw o things are bad for the battery: First, to let it completely discharge, w hich is almost impossible in normal operation because the phone itself w ill turn off long before the battery is empty in order to prevent such a thing. The battery itself also most likely contains a similar monitoring circuit, although at a low er threshold. Second bad thing is to keep it at a high voltage like 4.2v. Think of it as you breathing. In your normal daily routine, you dont empty your lungs as far as they w ill go, nor take as deep a breath as you can. You w ork best somew here in the middle. But if you know youre going diving underw ater, then youll w ant to first fill up w ith as much oxygen as you can hold, so you can stay under w ater for as long as possible. But to live your daily routine that w ay w ould be very stressful on your body. Now in regards to your first question, and w ith the understanding of the above, no 4.2v is not recommended for extending battery life. 4.2v is a rather arbitrary value thats been agreed on by the industry as providing a reasonable balance betw een long term longevity and short term runtime. If you dont need to survive all day w ithout access to electricity, youd be better to stop at maybe 4.0v or even 3.9v. How ever, the tradeoff is that youll get few er hours w ithout the charger. People tend to be less concerned w ith how many years their battery w ill last, than how many hours it w ill last, and w ill often throw out the w hole phone in tw o years anyw ay. As for temperature, I personally feel that the heat is generated more by the phone than by the battery. Put a healthy battery in a phone and use it hard for a few hours, and the phone itself w ill raise the temp of the battery, simply because the battery is inside the phone. Finally, as for w hat the phone app reports, its mostly guessw ork (except for temp and voltage). But the voltage is not a reliable indicator of remaining charge, because the voltage can stay close to 3.7v most of the time. The percentage left is guessed by trying to track and count how many amps the phone is draw ing from time to time, sampling it maybe every few seconds, and comparing that to the expected capacity of a new healthy stock battery. On my phone w ith an extended battery, the phone w ill drop to 5%, and then continue to run fine for another day. So w hile voltage isnt real accurate, its w hat I w atch and I know that w hen it falls around 3.4v, its approaching empty. Then again, if youve been using it heavy and let it sit, the voltage w ill come back up a bit.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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Vince wrote:
@David, my understanding is that its the battery itself, not the charger, that limits the current once its getting full. With a typical 4.2v charger, once the cell is saturated at 4.2v, it simply w ont draw anything more. Zero current. In order to force more in, youll need to increase the voltage. Maybe you can find a 4.3v charger? Or just hotw ire it to 3 fresh alkalines in series, giving you 4.5v. I dont w ant to be standing anyw here near you w hen you do this. When you say failure, I assume you mean loud noise, smoke and flames, and lithium shrapnel killing everything around you. You also could hook it to your car battery. Any DC source of significant voltage should cause the catastrophic failure you seek. Legal disclaimer: Dont actually do any of this. In fact, forget that I even w rote it. These are bad ideas, and nobody but you w ill be responsible for the consequences. http://w w w .youtube.com/w atch?v=vS2hGoJVmlA
Vince wrote:
@David, ah, glad to know you know w hat youre doing. I never know w ho Im responding to, so I often lean tow ard dramatic caution. But you your goals, a conceivable failure might result from a USB charger somehow shorting the 5v input straight to the intended 4.2v output, resulting in w hat youre looking for. The USB out from w all chargers sometimes can supply over an amp.
b fvb wrote:
yeah men
Sexama wrote:
-)
Juan wrote:
Hello! I have a question that I have not fully satisfied by reading this w ebsite. Using a laptop in a continuosly w ay, is it better to fully charge the battery and then to fully discharge it or is it better to have the charger alw ays connected?
Vince wrote:
@Juan, the question to your question is is it better for w hat? Better for the longest long-term life of the battery? Better for the longest runtime the next time you need it? In any case, the w orst thing to do is to use it if you dont need to, to run the laptop off the battery w hen there is AC available. 1.) Batteries w ill last for a few hundred charging cycles. Fully discharging them and recharging uses those cycles. 2.) If you suddenly need to hit the road, you w ill only have a partial charge. The best thing to do for the longest runtime w hen you need it is to keep it fully charged. How ever, this w ill reduce the long-term life expectancy of the battery. The best thing to do for the long-term life of the battery w ould be to charge it to 50%, take it out of the laptop and dont use it, and just run the laptop on AC. Recheck it every few months to keep the charge around 50%. If you are planning a trip, then put it in and top it off before you go. But this all seems a little inconvenient.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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So the bottom line is that youll have to choose a balance betw een long-term, short-term, and convenience, based on your ow n personal goals.
Juan wrote:
Well Vince, thank you for your reply. My question w as.better for longest long-term life of the battery. I mean if you have to w ork w ith battery on because you need to move in the office you cannot put and take off the battery every time. I read about someone that think it is better to charge the battery and then take off the charger to let the battery discharge and then re-connect the charger and more over! Instead some other one assure that is better to leave the charger alw ays connected to also get the battery alw ays balanced I dont know you reply is quite clear and I know the better w ay is to not use the battery but Id like to know your reply in this scenario. Thank you.
Vince wrote:
@Juan, yes, in your case I recommend plugging it in w henever convenient. There is no advantage to unplugging it for the purpose of intentionally discharging the battery. That only hurts it. Remember that the pow er cord is not the charger. The charger is inside the computer, and it w ill stop charging the battery w hen the battery is full, even w hen the pow er cord is still connected. At that point the computer is running AC, not the battery, and it w ill take a long time before the battery drops low enough on its ow n for the charger kick back in again. But w hen that happens it w ill quickly top off the battery again, and you probably w ill never notice it sw itching. So the battery w ill alw ays be kept very close to full, so its ready w hen you do need to use it.
Juan wrote:
@Vince: thanks for your answ er. I know the charger circuit is in the laptopIts just the name w e usually give to it. Your answ er let me get a question too: If the charger stops to charge the battery and the computer w ill run AC for a w hile, w hy in the article is mentioned that the battery can reduce its life because to some chemical effects. What do you say about this aspect? Thank you very much
Vince wrote:
@Juan, Im not sure I understand your question correctly, but if I do, this is my answ er: Keeping the battery at full capacity does reduce its life because of the internal chemical stresses it suffers at high capacity. But this is how most chargers are designed. This is the tradeoff, the dow nside to being prepared for maximum run-time. Batteries are most comfortable at half capacity. This is w hy I say it w ould be best to charge to 50% and then remove the battery if you know you w ont be needing it for a long time, because the chargers are not designed to stop and leave it at 50%.
Juan wrote:
Well the question w as a little different but thats ok about your answ er. Thank you very much. Bye bye.
Sapan wrote:
How does this apply to an iPhone? If I w ant to maximize the life of the battery should I charge approximately to 75% then let it drop to 25% and then keep repeating?
Sapan wrote:
And w hy does apple recommend draining your battery completely at least once a month? http://w w w .apple.com/batteries/iphone.html
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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On February 22, 2012 at 9:38am
Vince wrote:
@Sapan, Im sure the info on this site w ould apply to all Lithium-Ion cells, including those used by an iphone. Yes, your 75% to 25% sounds good, trying to keep it around half w ay. Their recommendation to completely drain it monthly makes no sense for getting the most out of the battery, but it may be useful for calibrating the phone. Over their lifetime, the maximum useable capacity slow ly decreases. By periodically topping it off and letting it run dow n to w here it turns itself off, your phone can learn w hat the new capacity is, and thereby giving you a more accurate percentage remaining indicator. Phones have no w ay of know ing or measuring how much charge is really left, because the only measurable value of the battery is voltage, and as you can see from the charts at the top of this page, the voltage can stay around 3.7v for a very long time and then drop to dead very suddenly. So w hat they try to do is keep a running total of how many milliamps w ere draw n over frequent small intervals. Its kind of like a printer trying to estimate how much ink is left based on how many pages youve printed since installing the new cartridge. Not real accurate, but its the best it can do. So by topping it off and then running it to completely dead w hile the phone counts how much its using every second, it can get a pretty good idea w hat the total expected capacity should be, and use that info to calculate a percentage remaining.
Vince wrote:
@Georgian Dobra, Advice: charge it and use it. I recommend an external slow charger. I just ordered another from ebay for under $3. Initially charge new battery for 12 hours. Then each morning, simply sw ap the freshly charged battery into the phone, and place the other battery into the charger. Repeat each morning, and you may find yourself free from charging cables! Slow charging over night provides a deeper, more saturated charge, by skipping stage 1 (as depicted in the initial graph on this page) and going straight to stage 2. Admittedly, charging this fully is not optimal for long-term longevity, but gives the best run-time w ithout overcharging.
Vince wrote:
@Dobra Georgian Ionut, No, 4.75V is not a good idea. Too high. Besides, how could you connect that to your battery? The charger of w hich I speak accepts the battery directly. The manufacturers w ebsite is w w w .yiboyuan.net. Everything there is in Chinese, but you can see pictures. My charger came w ith a 3500mAh battery. In my case, the C value is 3500mA, the amperage at w hich a full battery w ould be drained in one hour. My charger output is 350mA at 4.2V, w hich is 0.1C for my battery. This is slow , and it takes about 12 hours for a full charge from dead. If you can see this w ebsite, it is a picture: http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/41JPn8azc4L._SL500_AA300_.jpg
CXR wrote:
Hi Vince, Ive been reading some blogs on your site. Super informative!!
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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I have some questions of my ow n RE Li ion EV batteries. I have done my research & believe I understand to be true, Li ion EV batts like to be kept at a 50-85% state of charge (SOC). If this is true then I also believe to be true the Li ion EV batt w ill last quite a long time. 1. Is a trickle charge an appropriate w ay to keep the Li ion EV batt at the nominal 50-85% SOC? 2. Is 4.20V DC the nominal voltage to make this happen or is it better to use a 4.00V DC or low er? 3. Can this be managed , i.e., w ith the old 1960-65 generator and voltage regulator automotive setup w here the ICE auto-engine ran a generator and a regulator w as used to keep the battery charged to optimum volts/amps, i.e. only? 4. What voltage/amperage w ould be best to provide to a Li ion EV batt to keep it at this 50-85% SOC, happy area , if the EV batt is using 4.2V cells, as many as 6000? Thanks in advance for responding, CXR
Vince wrote:
@CXR, Thanks for the positive feedback. Unfortunately, your questions are beyond my area of know ledge. I even had to look up w hat EV meant! I hesitate to discuss things if I dont know w hat Im talking about, but if I may speculate and extrapolate w hat Ive learned, and apply it w hat Im guessing an EV might be, that being just a large battery of Li-Ion cells 1. I dont believe theres such a things as trickle charge regarding Li-Ion cells. You simply set the voltage, and the cells draw w hat they can. As they become saturated at that voltage, they just w ont draw any more current. 2. 4.2v is generally considered to be 100% capacity. 3.7v w ould be 50%, the nominal voltage. Because its not a linear transition, I think your 85% goal might even be achieved at 3.9V. Im just guessing based on discharge charts Ive seen. 3. Youre over my head. 4. I dont think theres such a thing as a 4.2V Li-Ion cell. The current norm is 3.7V (nominal) for cell phones, w hich have a non-linear runtime voltage betw een 4.2 and 3.2V. As for your maximum current, youll need to do a little math. First you need to know the capacity of each cell in mAh, then multiply by the number of cells in your battery. For example if I w ere to use four cells each rated at 3500 mAh, Id have C=14A, the current at w hich the battery pack w ould be depleted from full to empty in one hour. Next you need to know the manufacturers maximum recommended charging rate. If its 0.5C, then Id w ant to charge at no more than 7A. Now thats all assuming that your battery pack is w ired in parallel, w hich is probably not the case. If your 6000 cells w ere 600 parallel packs of 10 each in series, then your 3.7V nominal becomes 37V. Bottom line is that Im not qualified to answ er your question. Your specifics w ill depend on many variables Im not familiar w ith. How ever, my guess w ould be that by charging 6000 cells from a household outlet, youll probably never come close to the maximum charging current.
CXR wrote:
Vince, Thanks for getting back so quick. Ill make an attempt to simplify. 1. An EV = Electric Vehicle. 2. Trickle charge is generally not regarding Li ion batteries, yet, if you w ould humor me, RE set the voltage , If the voltage is set at 4.2v - 3.7v and stays constant for 6-8 hours intermittently w ill this charge the battery, if the battery is first fully charged ? .By intermittent I mean 3 hour at 4.2v , 3 hour at 3.7v , 1 hour at 4.2v. 3. RE Over your head the scenario in # 2. above, is w hat I am describing. Just trying to understand if I can , or need to start or stop the charge automatically. (Voltage Regulator)? 4. I am not speaking about a cell phone or a small battery. Please think EV. Manufacturer recommended charge rate is not w hat I am thinking. I am thinking if I can keep the Li ion battery charged w ith a trickle after an initial full charge 5. I w ill hunt dow n the , 6000 cells in parallel or series and /or bundled and see if I can find this info to give you a more intelligent basis to answ er. Thanks, CXR
CXR wrote:
Vince, Just found the info on parallel/series. For the Li ion batt I am speaking about a full re-charge requires 3,5 hours at 70 amps, 240 volts. This battery w hen fully charged stores approx. 53 kWh at a nominal 375 volts. I think this may help you and I w ith the calks you are trying to teach me. Thanks CXR
CXR wrote:
Vince, I left out some important info.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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Cells are the 18650 type found in laptops. Thanks CXR
6000 cells are arranged into 11 sheets connected in series. Each sheet contains 9 bricks connected in series. Each brick contains 69 cells connected in parallel.
CXR wrote:
Vince, What is meant by the absence of trickle or float charge at full charge RE a Li ion battery. This comment is from the Battery university article Charging lithium ion Does it mean that a Li ion batt can use a trickle charge w hen it is not at full charge? OR Does it mean that a Li ion batt cannot use a trickle charge at all , anytime? Thanks CXR
CXR wrote:
Vince , I think I may have found my answ er. please see same article as above Charging lithium ion Section 1 paragraph 17 second to last sentence, Charge absorption is very high and w ith a low and intermittent charge ,charging simply takes a little longer w ithout negatively affecting the battery. The absence of trickle charge further simplifies the charger. Question 1. What is a low and intermittent charge ? below 4.2V ? 2. What is meant by the absence of a trickle charge? 3. Can I put , w hat I call a trickle charge, of 3.7DC-4.2DC w ithout harm to the battery in a low and intermittent charge format? Thanks CXR
Vince wrote:
@CXR, thanks for the clarifications. The sum of my know ledge about electric vehicle batteries is from w hat I just learned from you. So if youre talking about a battery consisting of thousands of cells, and the battery has a nominal voltage a hundred times higher than that of any cell, I cant imagine w hat youre considering using 3.7-4.2v for. Since the battery is nominally 375V, and it takes 240V to charge it, then the 240V (I assume AC) is pow ering a dedicated charger, not charging the battery itself. If w e just scale the numbers from a normal Li-Ion cell up by a hundred fold, simply as a thought experiment, maybe your 85% goal w ould be achieved at four hundred volts DC. Once the battery pack is saturated at that voltage, the charging current w ould be zero. But all batteries have some self-discharge, plus Li-Ion usually have some monitoring circuitry, so your real trickle current w ould probably be equal to w hatever the total self discharge current w ould be. THOUGHT EXPERIMENT ONLY! The info I provide should only be used for thinking about things, not actually doing anything at all.
CXR wrote:
Thanks Vince for your help !! ill be back at you in the future, i am sure. CXR PS dont be a stranger , if you find something you feel may help me send me an email !
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Thank you ! Thank you ! Thank you ! Thank you ! Thank you !
Damian wrote:
Hello, just bought a brand new MOTOROLA RAZR XT910. It has an (incorporate) Standard battery, Li-Ion 1780 mAh. For the best performace how should I do the first charge? Phone turned off and 12 H of charging? Do I need to repeat this the 2nd and 3rd time? Many thanks!
Christophoros wrote:
Hi I disconnected the old 11.1dc Li-ion laptop battery and remove all the 6 cells from it (Note:i removed w hen the battery w as discharge) I have connect 3 in series (i get 10.5VDC) and also the other 3 in series (i get also 10.5VDC) and finally the 2 packs in parallel for longer runs. So 10.5+10.5 in paraller=10.5VDC The question.How do i charge them? What transformer shall i put?
Ace wrote:
Hi, I have an application w here Ill be using Lithium Ion Phosphate batteries in the Antarctica in -40 deg C temperatures. Normal charger voltage is 3.65V per cell. Would I have to increase this CV?? if yes then by how much.
wazzink wrote:
i salvaged a laptop battery and got a lithium-ion battery pack and i threw aw ay the circuit before i did my evil laugh.. now i got 3 pairs of parallel 18650 batt connected in series w ith 10.8v nominal and rated 3.2AH.. w hen fully charged reaches 12.6v i hope you can imagine the config. w ell it looks like this |=|=|=| my questions are: 1. Can i use a charger w ith 12v and 1.5A max to charge the w hole pack?? 2. What if i use a max 1A?? max 500mA?? 3. Does the charging current automatically drops as the batt pack reaches 12v?? 4. Im planning to use LM317T or LM7812 for the charger and charge the pack for max 3 hours.. is it ok?? ..tnx!!!
Vince wrote:
@w azzink: 1: probably 2: slow er, better charges 3: yes. Current flow s from higher voltage to low er voltage, like from a tall bucket into a shorter bucket. Once they are the same voltage, current flow w ill stop, or reduce to the rate of parasitic self discharge. Essentially, trickle charge. 4. dont know about model numbers, but since 12v is less than 12.6v max, I w ould think it should be safe to leave it hooked up there indefinitely. One w ord of advice: Ive read w arnings against building your ow n battery packs, because all cells must be balanced, or one w ill discharge faster, go negative, and then bad things start to happen. But in theory, yes I think it should w ork like you plan.
wazzink wrote:
@vince thanks man!!! got a fast reply, i thought ill be checking this site next w eek.. thanks i didnt touch the connection of the batteries, already in that setup w hen i took it out from the batt pack.. only i threw aw ay the protection circuit.. the brand is panasonic CGR18650HM.. is it good one?? w hat should be the final charging current before i disconnect it from charger?? LM317T and LM7812 are voltage regulator ICs w ith max out current of about 1.5A.. thumbs up to you dude
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On May 2, 2012 at 10:07pm
Vince wrote:
Sorry, cant tell you if panasonic CGR18650HM is good. No idea. Regarding final charging current: The value referred to as C is the current at w hich the battery w ould fully deplete in one hour. In your case, C=3.2A. According to the first chart at the top of the page, batteries can be considered full w hen the charging current falls to 3% of C, or about 0.1A in your case.
wazzink wrote:
thanks Vince!!! Im so lucky i found this site first before i can make a bomb.. i think ill cut it off in 200mA for more safety.. thanks dude.. i found 2 devices attached on one side of the batt pack w hich i didnt remove.. one is,i think, for temperature sensing,..and the other one connected in series in +terminal and i dont know to w hat use it is but i dont w anna take it off.. i am thinking if the second part has something to do w ith current limiting so im planning to keep it there.. i googled the part no. 4MM80H1-19 but no info found.. SALUTE to you man!! very big help..
Vince wrote:
Glad I can help. I dont think you need to w orry about safety at the ending current. Since youre only charging at 12V instead of 12.6V (divided by 3 w ould be 4v vs 4.2v, w here 4.2 w ould be considered full), youre never charging to full capacity anyw ay. Slow er charging is better than faster. The voltage is the safety issue, and 12v w ill be great for safety and also longevity of the battery. I think the cutoff at 3% is more simply because there w ouldnt be much advantage to keeping it charging beyond that, as its already just about saturated. My chargers only charge at 350ma max, and yeah, they take all day.
maksud wrote:
I have one question that if i give 12Vdc charging to 6Vdc Li-ion battery directly then w hat w ill happen to battery? w hich effect may be seen? . If something happend to battery then I need some mathematical prove. thanx. I need answ er urgently
Mar wrote:
Some clarification please 1) How could an over-discharged single 3.7v Li-ion battery be boosted to life again? Having this is battery specs ( US18650gr ) Nominal Voltage Nominal Capacity Max. Charging current Max. Discharging current Average 3.7 V 2200mAh, Minimum 2150mAh 2.2A Max. 4.3 A max.
2) Could I use the basic 5Vdc /800ma Nokia cellphone charger w ithout any modification for boosting? 3) Is it better if the voltage is low er than 4.2V dc for safety and other concern?
Ron wrote:
Hi Mar, #1. Depending on the battery some w ill have a tiny plastic label covering a set of electrical contacts that must first be briefly shorted w ith something such as a paper clip. This resets the electronic safety device installed in the battery itself. From there you should check the voltage on the battery before charging it. If it reads 1.6 volts DC or less then toss it in the garbage simply due to the fact that the battery may be unstable from this point on. Other than that placing it on a charger and checking the voltage after a few minutes to see that it is charging is a good idea. #2 I am unfamiliar w ith those chargers #3 At 4.2 volts you do get a greater amount of charge into your battery than at a low er charge voltage, the only risks are to battery life expectancy due to the fact that your battery is
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approaching its maximum safe voltage point (4.3v is really bad), but then again temperature, rate of charge, and the average charge state of your battery w ould also be factors that w ould diminish your batterys life expectancy. So going to only 4.0vdc on a charge but doing it on a fast charge and keeping your battery on full charge for vast amounts of time w ould be w orse for the battery life expectancy than a modest amperage 4.2 volt charge rate.
Richard wrote:
Hi I have a 24V 10Ah Li-ion battery that I w ant to charge w hilst on a boat. I have no details about the boat as w e are unsure w hat boat w e w ill be using. My questions are 1 How much current w ould the bike take w hen charging? (I need to know this so that i know w e are not draining the boats pow er w hen not hooked up to the shore pow er) 2 What size inverter w ould be needed? If you can reply as soon as possible that w ould be fantastic. Many Thanks Richard
Pantaz wrote:
1. Are any chargers able to determine C for individual cells? (So that they can adjust charging rate for different capacities.) Is it even possible, in any practical w ay? 2. Im building bicycle LED headlights, and I w ant to experiment w ith different cell combinations and capacities in series/parallel configurations. When charging a parallel battery pack, should/can the charge current be increased proportionally? (E.g., C for tw o 2200/mAh cell in parallel = 4.4A, so a C/10 rate w ould be 440 milliamps?)
Vince wrote:
@Richard, I can only assume certain things based on your question. You mention a bike? Maybe you have a rechargeable electric bike? For your answ ers, I w ould look at the charger that came w ith it. It should list the current it w ill draw . You mention inverter, so I assume your bike charger runs on 120V AC, and your boat has 12V DC like a car? If this is the case, then you are trying to convert 12V DC into 120V AC w hich probably has an adapter to convert it back to DC, probably 24V DC. You may w ant to see if you can find, possibly from the manufacturer or elsew here, a different type of adapter. Also, assuming a boat is like a car, there are fuses that may limit your charging current anyw ay.
Vince wrote:
@Pantaz, 1.) I dont know how a charger could be able to know the capacity of the battery, unless it is perhaps a conditioning charger that fully discharges, fully charges, and fully discharges again to measure it. Since this is not necessary for Li-Ion, I havent seen any that do this, like they used to do for NIMH and NICD. How ever, That is exactly the process some people recommend for cell phones to calibrate the battery monitoring softw are. As far as I know , that information is only used to display the % remaining symbol. 2.) Yes, that sounds correct.
A-Freak wrote:
Hello to the Battery Experts
I w ant to build some kind of portable Pow er Block w here an solar paneel keeps some paralell connected Li-Ion cells (at least 10Ah) charged. It should deliver approximately 100mAh for some LEDs every night and as much capacity as possible w hen needed a few times per year. Most important is the longest possible life w ith respect to remaining capacity. It needs to be available for at least 5 years w ithout service, better 10 or more. It is clear to me that i loose capacity but gain lifetime w hen i charge an Li-Ion cell to less than 4,2V so i w ould like to do this. Additionally charging current w ould be very slow , at least tw o sunny days for recharge and much more w ithout sunshine.
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Now my question is:
Do i still need some kind of charge termination for this application or w ould the cells stay happy w hen i just recharge them up to maybe 3,9V and keep them floating there?
jacky wrote:
I ow n a Htc Sensation XE, So as u said that 4.2V to charge the battery, But w hy the original htc charger output w as 5V___1A ??? Since i saw the article said the battery cannot charge more than 4.2V.
Vince wrote:
@A-Freak, Its my understanding that current can only from from higher voltage to low er voltage, so if your charging voltage is 3.9V, current flow w ill simply stop until your battery pack drops below the charging voltage. Therefore, no, I dont see any need for any type of charge termination. If your battery voltage goes above the charging voltage, then current could reverse, backfeed into the charger, and drain the battery pack. This could happen in tw o situations: 1) its cloudy or night time, and the charging voltage drops below the battery voltage, and 2) battery voltage can raise and low er w ith environmental conditions. I recently noticed this w ith my ow n cells w hich w ere left outdoors, not attached to a charger or anything.
Vince wrote:
@jacky, Good question. This is a common misconception because even many of those w ho know better still use in the common, rather than the correct, w ay. The 5V 1A thing you are referring to is not the charger. It is the thing that provides pow er to the charger. The true charger is built into the phone. The thing you see is just providing high current USB type pow er to the charger. Its quite generic, and can be used to pow er anything that takes 5V, up to 1A, including USB pow ered coffee cup w armers, etc. The charger in the phone, on the other hand, w hile being pow ered by 5V and draw ing up to 1A, most likely has monitoring circuitry, shutoff, and other smart sensing stuff. It needs 5V to run itself and to output 4.2V. The 5V pow er source has none of that.
jacky wrote:
@Vince, Thank for the reply, This is the great information. I think u can make w rite this statement to your w ebsite, so everyone can read 1 more useful information about the USB adapter charger and inside the phone charger. Thank you.
manoj wrote:
i w ant battery for instant of pow er charging and w hen the circuit sw itch is closed it w ill provide continuous supply and the range is around 12 v
crs wrote:
I have a razor w ith a Li battery. Its w all charger is rated at 4.2v 600ma, but Id like to build an adapter so that I can charge it from USB (5V +/- 5%). Could this be done by adding one or more diodes to drop the USB voltage dow n to 4.2V?
Vince wrote:
@crs, I think its more complicated then that. Here are some ideas (w hich are above my head): http://w w w .maxim-ic.com/app-notes/index.mvp/id/3241 http://w w 1.microchip.com/dow nloads/en/appnotes/00971a.pdf
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krist0ph3r wrote:
props to you. excellent article. exactly w hat ive been looking for, for years!
Kingsley wrote:
thanks guys. theres an unfathomable w ealth of know ledge from this resource. keep it up @ Isidor
kamal wrote:
i w ant to learn about battery
Dan wrote:
Hi All I noticed above this statement: If the discharge continues to about 2.70V/cell or low er, the batterys protection circuit puts the battery into a sleep mode. This renders the pack unserviceable and a recharge w ith most chargers is not possible. To prevent a battery from falling asleep, apply a partial charge before a long storage period. I have found this to be the case in a system I am designing, as the battery protection circuit releases the battery from sleep mode w hen a certain voltage is presented across the protected battery terminals, and since my charger IC uses current, it w ill not cause the protection IC to release the battery from sleep mode. My question is, how do prevent the battery from going into sleep mode in my system, I have a circuit that shuts off all of the circuitry at about 2.9V and then the system current reduces to about 6 microamps, but over time, this small draw w ill eventually low er the battery voltage to a point w here the battery charger w ill not be able to bring the battery out of sleep. How do I handle this in my product? Is there a special kind of charger IC that w ill cause the protection circuit to release the battery, or do i simply have to tell my end users not to leave their system uncharged for extended periods of time? Thanks so much, Dan
Vince wrote:
Hi Dan, I think even w ith a totally disconnected battery, the batterys ow n internal circuitry w ill eventually self discharge it into the sleep mode. I think a cell w ould have a shelf life for a long time, but not indefinite, so no user should ever leave anything uncharged for extended periods. I dont see any w ay around that. Vince
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On August 22, 2012 at 9:37am
Dan wrote:
Thanks Vince, I w as leaning tow ard that possibility after reading numerous articles and such as w ell. Does anyone know how to calculate the amount of time it w ould take a battery to discharge from a particular voltage to a different voltage. Say discharge from 3.00V to 2.55V w ith a know n current draw , for example 6 microamps? or at lease a decent estimate? Thanks, Dan
Vince wrote:
No, I dont think so. The problem is that lithium ion cell voltage doesnt drop in a linear fashion. This is actually its strength, that it can maintain close to its nominal voltage throughout most of its discharge cycle. Because of this, w e cant really estimate how much charge remains, based on a voltage reading. My only experience is w ith my cell phone, but it estimates remaining charge by trying to tally up, second by second, how much charge it has used, and then subtract that from the assumed maximum capacity.
Alex wrote:
I have a bike light battery w hich is labelled Rechargable li-ion 7.4v. I have lost the charger but I have an AC adaptor labelled PRI: 230v ~ 50hz, SEC: 4.5v - 200ma. It fits the light battery. Could I use it to charge the light battery? Thanks! Alex
Vince wrote:
Hi Alex, No, I dont think so. I suspect your 7.4v is actually a battery of tw o 3.7v cells, 3.7 x 2 = 7.4. So if a 3.7v charges to 4.2v, a 7.4v w ould probably need 8.4v. Just guessing. Vince
Alex wrote:
Vince. Thanks for your reply. Ill invest in the correct replacement charger. Cheers!
SinthiaV wrote:
@crs @Vince Hi. The w ay to drop a voltage is to put the circuit in question in series w ith a resistance. In order to determine w hat size of resistor to use, you use the series property that the voltage drops across the components in a series circuit add up to the source voltage. Measure the impedance across the outputs of the existing circuit. By applying ohms law (v/i=r) you should see 4.2V / .6A = 7ohms this w ill be r1. The resistor is r2. v1 and v2 are corresponding voltage drops. Since current is equal at all points in a series circuit, w e can ignore it and say r1/r2 = v1/v2 for a result of r2=1.3ohms. There w ill be a drop in current , how ever at 1.3ohms I think it w ill be small. If I remember right (DC theory w as a long time ago!) it w ill be proportional to the size of the resistance.
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For the DC motor operation this is fine - as voltage drops, then max speed drops, and is of no concern to me. For the Battery charging how ever, as they are in series, I w ill need 30 x 4.1V DC = 123 Volts to charge the entire series, and probably something like 10 - 20 Amps. As a cell is taken offline w hen or if it reaches say 4.1 volts. I need to either absorb the extra 4.2 Volts, or reduce the charge voltage to 118.9 Volts, and so on and so on. Now does it make sense to charge them this w ay? Is it possible to drop the voltage of a charger from a signal w hen cells are taken offline? or w ould it make sense to add in a resistor to the series to soak up the extra 4.1 volts ( 1 resistor per battery until they are all off? ) Or should I try and make individual charging of each cell using linear voltage regulators such that each cell has its ow n regulator, and if 1 is taken offline, the others should still charge at the same volts ? Parallel charging is out of the question as this w ould need massive current. to be normal time 60 AH cells x 30 = 1800 Amps, so C/100 is still 18 amps, and it w ould take 100 hours to charge. .... too long!
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On September 30, 2012 at 8:44am
Ramhorn wrote:
For my iPhone, w hat is a good partial discharge percentage before charging? Second, is it possible to condition li-ion batteries. Say, fully discharging the battery the first time you get your iPhone4, than after that apply the method of never fully discharge before charging. Will this condition the battery, as it is new , to be able take more stress afterw ards?
Marsman wrote:
Ive been playing around w ith some Makita 18v 3Ah Li-ion battery packs. The charger is a fast charger (approx 20minutes) it really pumps current into the packs w ith short on/off cycles in excess of 10amps. the battery gets quite w arm w hich is not good for Li-ion. As Im not a tradie I use my tools occaisionally and dont feel such brutal charging is necessary so Ive investiagted alternative chargers including one that w ill w ork from my car battery (Makita sells one for over $150 !!! no thanks!). I found the universal laptop chargers are nearly on the mark, they have selectable voltages and have a 20v setting (one I got w as exactly 20.1V and w as able to deliver > 5amps). This equates to about 4.02V per cell, very safe even though you only charge to about 80% capacity. It still charges the battery in about 1 hour w ith current tapering dow n from about 5 amps to zero). I dont intend leaving the batteries connected but at this voltage I presume it w ould be ok. Interested in experts comments on w hat I am doing? at about $15 Australian on Ebay it represents a 90% saving on Makita chargers. The battery packs have all sorts of protection in them so Im not really w orried but reading this forum, balanced cell charging might be a concern over time? added advantage is that if the packs have been over discharged the makita charger sees them as faulty and w ont charge but the Ebay charger doesnt care (see numerous forums on this topic)
Paolo wrote:
Hi, first of all, thank you for this usefull post! Im w orking on a Li-Ion battery pack 6-cell, 10.8V 5600mAh, coming from my macbook. The battery is pretty old and has discharged due to inactivity below 9.0 V, causing the protection circuit to sw itch over. In this state, its charger (magsafe 60W) doesnt recognize it and it is helpless for me. For this ive decided to try charging it manually. I have a pow er supply 12V 1.08 A that seems to be suitable, also if it has less pow er, i said to myself itll employ just 3 times more: the strange is that there is an intermittent current absorption, normally 150 mA w ith peak at 1.5 A. Voltage seems to grow according to your graph in stage 1. Do you think can be acceptable? Or is not good to charge w ith less pow er?
marsman wrote:
they are actually connected 3 series connected sets of 2 in parallel. you really need to manually charge them carefully, not exceeding about 12.2 volts. most plug pack adapters that say 12v dc are not regulated and w ill put out over 15v w ith little load, they w ill over charge the li ion pack and maybe blow it up if left too long. if you keep measuring the voltage and stop at 12.2 volts you should be ok i think. that should make them look ok to the proper charger but 9v should not be too low you may have a faulty pack
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On October 30, 2012 at 6:17am
idan sl wrote:
For my iPhone, w hat is better: 1. To charge it all night (8 hours) ? or 2. To charge it tw ice a day half a charge? THX
Hans wrote:
When you say Discontinue using charger and/or battery if the battery gets excessively w arm, w hat is the temperature range you should discontinue charging? I have a new battery in my phone and during charging the battery temperature reaches 43C.
Michael wrote:
thank you very much AWESOME
Herieza wrote:
Thanks so much for the full mastery and comprehensive article much more convincing by your research.
Jack wrote:
I have a smartphone w ith 2100mAh capacity, I have quite a number different USB chargers, all w ith the same voltage (5.0v) but different amperage output from 0.5A to 1.5A. Except my iPad charger (it is rated at 5.1V, 2.1 A output). I w onder charging my phone w ith the iPad charger w ith damage my battery in long term? I read you reply to nolan above mentioned that w e should never charge the battery larger than 1C? I am a bit lost in how to calculate C. It doesnt come into the formula or Watt = VI Thanks!
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Vince wrote:
Hi Jack,
The 5V and 5.1V things arent really chargers. They are just USB type pow er sources used for pow ering the charger. I mean, you cant really hook a battery itself up to any of them. You plug a phone or other device into the 5(5.1)V pow er source, and the phone itself contains the charger w hich charges the battery at 4.2V. The value of C refers to how much current w ould it take to completely discharge a fully charged battery in one hour. So C for your smartphone battery is 2100mA, or 2.1A. Coincidentally, your ipad charger is rated for 2.1A. But remember that it is not really a charger. If it w ere rated for 100A, it w ould still be okay. That means that it w ould be capable of putting out up to 100A of current, but it is the actual charger inside the device that determines how much of that up to 100A it w ould draw , and how much it w ould send to the battery. For example, a typical household socket is rated for 15A, but most things you p[lug into it w ont draw anyw here near that amount of current. Also, the 2.1A * 5.1V pow er supply is = 10.71 Watts, but the 2.1A C value for the battery is at 4.2V, w hich is 8.82W. (2.1A * 4.2V)
Vince wrote:
@Martin, re: minimum charge voltage Yes, and maybe no. A smartphone, for example, may have a minimum voltage at w hich the phone w ill shut dow n and w ont come back on. And then the cell itself, or battery, should also have a tiny circuit board, w hich, as far as I understand, is supposed to prevent it from being draw n dow n below a different (and low er) minimum voltage, and also to prevent it from being overcharged. And then there is another point, even low er, below w hich the cell is truly dead and w ill not accept a charge. So each minimum exists to prevent it from reaching the next minimum.
Vince wrote:
@Martin, more info: I just found this board, a Protection Circuit Module: http://w w w .all-battery.com/protectioncircuitmodulepcbfor37vli-polymerbattery85alimit-pcb1s.aspx Its specs show a maximum of 4.25V and a minimum of 2.5V.
Vince wrote:
@Damon Lee, Not really sure. I guess it may depend on your charger, and w hat makes it decide to turn green. Right now Im eating a pizza, and soon Ill decide Im full. But after I w ait a w hile and let things settle, Ill have room again for a little more. Batteries charging are a lot like me eating pizza. Fast chargers w ill feed the battery a lot of charge quicker than it can settle. They w ill reach that 4.2V mark in a hurry, but then after you take the battery off the charger, it w ill go dow n sooner than if you slow charged it. Ultimately, if thats your only charger, then you dont have a choice. I assume that once the light turns green, it quits sending out a charge. So leaving it on the charger w ont accomplish anything if thats true, nor w ill it hurt anything. I think the best w ay to find out if it is really fully charged is to take it off, leave it off for a few hours, and then put it back on and see if it takes more charge (red instead of green).
Dave wrote:
Very informative article, although I have a question: Having charged my LiOn battery, and on the multimeter it show s up as 4.2V, my camera still show s battery empty w hen I sw itch it on, and w ould then sw itch off automatically. Any idea w hy?
Vince wrote:
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@Dave, assuming that theres nothing w rong w ith the camera itself, this normally indicates that the battery is at the end of its useful life for the camera. Cameras are high-drain devices, meaning that they require more current than other devices. The battery may have 4.2V, but can no longer maintain that voltage output at the required amperage. As soon as a normal load is applied to the battery, its voltage drops quickly to a low or unusable point. But once the load is removed, the battery voltage may measure high again. Its also possible that something inside the battery has gone w rong. In any case, its time for a new battery.
Vince wrote:
Im no expert, but I read that to mean charge efficiency is 97 to 99 percent during stage one, w hen the battery is starting out from near empty and is able to accept nearly all of the energy its receiving. This is w hen it stays coolest. Tow ard the end of the entire charging cycle, even though there is still a slight charging current, the accumulated charge in the cell reaches a maximum and w ont increase. Therefore, at that point, there is 0% efficiency, all current supplied is being w asted elsew here. Efficiency is how much of the energy consumed is being used for the desired purpose. The rest is w asted as heat. Electric space heaters, for example, are all 100% efficient because it is their intended purpose to give off heat, so none of the energy they consume is w asted.
Ben wrote:
Hey, I got a question concerning my Lumia 920: When I use my Lumia, it starts to shut dow n at about 4% of battery charge. When I then perform a soft reset and start the phone again, I suddendly have more than 20% battery, w ithout charging it. My question is, if this is for safety reasons (so that the battery w ill never be discharged completly - but 20% seems pretty much), or if this is just a softw are bug w here the correct battery charge is not read out correctly? Because I really w ould like to use the 20% too, but if this w ill demage my battery, I w ould prefere to charge it. I hope someone can answ er my question.
Vince wrote:
Ben, no I w ouldnt w orry about it damaging your battery. Theres no w ay to read how much charge is left. The voltage is the closest w e have, and thats not real accurate. When you use the battery, the voltage w ill drop. The faster you use it, the faster the voltage drops. But then if you let it sit, the voltage w ill increase. The faster you had been using it, the more you can expect it to increase. This is because you can draw more current than the battery can provide for long. Think of it like a bottle of ketchup. When it gets close to empty, you really have to be patient to get the last few drops out.
Bob wrote:
Ive read that LIo batteries have 2 stages. 1st staged charges faster than 2nd. Ive been monitoring my HTC Inspire phone w ith a couple of battery w idgets that w ill graph the charge and discharge rates over time. Ive been noticing that if the battery is less than 50% and charging, the charge speeds up extremely fast to 100% after it gets to to approx 72%. The charge graph is not linear but slightly curved until it reaches 70-75% then the battery go to full charge immediately. Im doing a test again and currently the battery is at 67%, Battery health is GOOD, temp is 84.2 F, Battery voltage is 4.201V. Im using the mfg w all charger that came w ith the HTC. Is this normal for the battery to top off like that so fast? Also w hen the battery is
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higher than 80% the charge rate seems to be more linear up to 100%. Thanks for any thoughts.
Vince wrote:
@Bob, no, those results do not seem normal to me. But remember that the amount of charge stored in a cell cannot be measured, so your phone is just guestimating those percentages. 4.2V is normally considered 100% full, meaning that you dont w ant to go higher than that. For it to be 4.2V and still show only 67% charged means you phone is making bad guesses. Remember that if charged too quickly, it could reach 4.2V w ithout being full. If you let it sit for a w hile, that voltage w ill fall and it w ill be able to take more charge. If you charge it slow ly enough, it w ill be more fully saturated at every voltage along the w ay, and w ill hold that voltage once off the charger. Myself, I use extended batteries that my phone w asnt designed for. Ive learned to pretty much ignore the percentage that my phone reports. I w atch the actual voltage instead, again understanding that it does not accurately represent charge, and w ill fluctuate a lot. But its a better indicator than the guestimated percentage.
Tony wrote:
I have a Paritrek-S portable nebulizer my w ife occasionally uses for asthma. The pow er pack is expensive and tw o have failed in past ~3 years. I opened one of them and it contains a charging circuit board w ith components and tw o Li-io size 18650 cells. What fails is only the cells (18 months and 12 months) . The unit is not used very often and w e try to maintain cells charged by boost charging every 1 - 3 months or so. It is foolish to spend $120 again w hen all I need to do is remove (already done) the tabbed batteries and replace them for about $24 or so. Qustion isI cannot identify if batteries are 1500mAh, 2200mAh, or 2600mAh. They drive a small motor/pump. I am thinking of getting the 2200mAh for about $24 for tw o. Other than duration for driving the small pump, do you think it w ill matter on capacity as charger circuit is in tact? In other w ords, w ill impact just be charging time if mAh rating is incorrect? (Cannot determine the LG originals rating)
Vince wrote:
Tony, I w ouldnt think changing the capacity should affect anything except runtime and charging time. In fact, as the cells deteriorate, their capacity goes dow n anyw ay. The rated capacity is the new capacity.
Vince wrote:
Hi Jimi, No, sorry, I w ouldnt. My phone is a Droid, w hich is the only source of my limited experience. But your question is puzzling, or maybe I dont understand. As far as I know , all lithium cells have a rating of 3.7v nominal (meaning average voltage), w ith a w orking range of about 4.2 to 3.2 volts. A battery pack w ould imply multiple individual cells. If w ired in parallel, they w ould maintain the same voltage, 4.2 - 3.2. If w ired in series, tw o cells w ould produce a battery of 8.4 - 6.4 volts, rated I guess at 7.4. (Thats 3.7 x 2.) So I dont understand w here you can get 5.3v from. ??? Remember that the 5v plug is not the charger. It is the source that provides pow er to the charger in the phone. Are you sure the plug says 1000maH, and not just 1000 mA? mah (milli amp hours) w ould be a measure of capacity, w hich w ould apply to a battery (or cell). ma (milli amps) on the other hand w ould be a measure of current, w hich w ould apply to a pow er cord, for example. 1000 mah seems like a very small battery for a modern phone. My batteries are 3500mah. (At 3.7v nominal.) The chargers usually get their pow er from a cord rated at 5V, 1000 ma current.
Berno wrote:
how to boosted fairly new sleeping li-ion ultrafire. thank you
John wrote:
Im building a small battery operated radio pow ered by a 18650 3000mAh (supposedly).
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Im trying to incorporate a built-in charger using a purpose IC - MCP73831 or MCP73837. Ive hit the problem of leaving the radio sw itched on w hile on charge because, as your article says, the charger may never see a current below the termination value and may continue to charge (at Stage 2). Im w ondering if devices w hich do allow themselves to be pow ered w hile charging (phones, ipads etc) simply rely on using only enough current to allow the charger current to drop below the threshold or if they use some other method of not confusing the charger. Thanks.
Chris G wrote:
LiFe 3.3v LiIon 3.6v LiPo 3.7v, there is a difference betw een lithium ion and lithium polymer batteries. This article suggests there isnt w hich is w hy I mention that there is a difference.
John wrote:
I found a useful Application Note by Microchip about simultaneously charging a Lithium battery w hile draw ing current from it: http://w w 1.microchip.com/dow nloads/en/AppNotes/01149c.pdf
Josh wrote:
Vince, From the information presented here and elsew here, I have divulged that charging at a low er C value is desirable for the long-term health of a li-ion battery. In my case, I have a cell phone w ith a non-removable battery, so I am limited to using the built-in charger (& thus cannot slow -charge using an external charger like you mentioned in your comment on Feb 23 2012). Given that my phone came w ith a 5.1V / 850mA ac adapter, w ould I be doing my phone a service if I instead used an adapter rated for 5 V / 550mA? My main concern lies in using an adapter that w as not bundled w ith my phone (though both adapters in question are Motorola branded). For w hat its w orth, I realize I can connect to a PC USB port to charge at ~500mA, but I cannot do this w hile the phone is turned off (my phone pow ers on w hen plugged into a PC USB port)and this article clearly advises that A portable device should be turned off w hile charging. Thanks.
Vince wrote:
Hi Josh, yes, the adapter youre talking about w ould w ork fine, and w ould charge it more slow ly. And yes, its find to have modern phones on w hile charging, so using your PC w ould be perfect. On my phone, w hen I plug it in to the PC, the phone gives me some options such as using it as a Mass storage device, or charge only. I alw ays choose charge only unless I w ant to transfer data from the phone to the pc. If you use the phone w hile its charging, it w ill charge more slow ly, w hich is actually a good thing! If Im on a long road trip, using GPS and streaming Pandora, I have to keep it plugged in or it w ill run out of juice.
Adam wrote:
I need help! I bought 2 rechargeable li-ion 9v batteries. Brand name is Maximal Pow er. I need 2 of them hooked up in the 9v clips to give me about 16 volts for led lighting. They w ill go for about 30 minutes super bright, then one of the batteries cuts off, dimming the lights to almost nothing. Why is it doing this??? I got 2 replacements. Still not w orking no matter w hich of the 4 I use..
SRV wrote:
Hi
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I am planning to use 2 Li-ion batteries 4.2V and1.5Ah in parallel. The charge current of individual battery is 750mA. I am designing a charger circuit for the same configuration.
The charger circuit should be designed for a 1,5A, is my understanding correct? Can i use a linear charger? I am w ondering how w ill the charge current be divided among the batteries. Any information on charging the batteries in parallel combintion w ill be helpful?
ken wrote:
my galaxy s3 come w ith 2100mah standard 3.8v & limit 4.35v now my issue is that during my idle mode 4.0x~4.1x volt & during charging mode it hit up 4.2x volt.. my temp hit up easily around 39~44c is that meaning my battery lifespan r declined? 9mths old battery only.. how can i undervolt it? really need ur guys assistance. thanks!
Vince wrote:
Hi Ken, yes, Im no expert, but I think youre correct in that fully charging your battery like this w ill reduce its lifespan in order to give you maximum run time. If thats not w hat you w ant, then you have some options. First, try charging it from a computers USB port instead of a w all charger. A computers USB port is supposed to limit current to 500ma at 5v. This w ill give you a slow er, cooler, better charge. Second, w hile also using the first suggestion, look for an app that alerts you w hen the phone voltage reaches a certain point, like 4.1v for example, and unplug it at that point. Third, instead of using the above suggestions, dont use your phone to charge the battery. This is the option I use. I bought a charger on ebay (it w as very cheap) and it charges very slow ly. I like this option because I no longer need to plug my phone in. Very convenient. Each morning, I just sw ap the battery w ith the one that had been sitting on the slow charger all day the previous day and night.
ken wrote:
@vince thanks for the feedback. open any apps,surfing,video call, & etc less than 5 min it w ill hit up 38~39c now idle staying at 28c/4.06v if charging w ith USB i get around 4.1x volt w all charger >> 4.205v depend on temp. if higher the temp, the higher the volt than can reached 4.274v (max) ambient temp around 29~32c w hile playing/surfing it w ill hit up 39~42c. i get restart once due to overheat that reached 45c if no mistake. conclusion, is time for new battery!
Vince wrote:
Ken, also consider that if you are using the phone to charge the battery, how do you know if the source of the heat is the battery or the phone? Phones are computers, and after a w hile there w ill be a lot of things installed and running that you arent aw are of. I see computers that are slow and hot and loud, the fan trying to keep cool the overw orked cpu. Sometimes a reformat and reload w orks w onders. Could also just need a new battery like you said.
ken wrote:
i just guessing cos previously i remember my voltage are fluctuating around 3.8~3.9v maybe is spyw are cos recently i installed lucky patcher. i removed all recently apps doesnt solve the issue & hard reset my phone it seems slightly better but more or less the same. i think of hardw are issue. if lappy fan loud try kill rundll32.exe & avoid open the game explorer at start menu. i bought laptop nearly 3 yrs never reformat. hehe
Tony wrote:
on Feb 11 I posted:I have a Paritrek-S portable nebulizer my w ife occasionally uses for asthma. The pow er pack is expensive and tw o have failed in past ~3 years. I opened one of them and it contains a charging circuit board w ith components and tw o Li-io size 18650 cells. What fails is only the cells (18 months and 12 months) . The unit is not used very often and w e try to maintain cells charged by boost charging every 1 - 3 months or so. It is foolish to spend $120 again w hen all I need to do is remove (already done) the tabbed batteries and replace them for about $24 or so. Qustion isI cannot identify if batteries are 1500mAh, 2200mAh, or 2600mAh. They drive a small motor/pump. I am thinking of getting the 2200mAh for about $24 for tw o. Other than duration for driving the small pump, do you think it w ill matter on capacity as charger circuit is in tact? In other w ords, w ill impact just be charging time if mAh rating is incorrect? (Cannot determine the LG originals rating)>
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Since then, I ordered and installed tw o 2600mAH cells, as mfr. w ould not give me time of day...they w ork as good as new !! No overheating, charge time about the same as originals .. I took a best guess at the LG cells that died and loks like all is great. Vince had replied: ony, I w ouldnt think changing the capacity should affect anything except runtime and charging time. In fact, as the cells deteriorate, their capacity goes dow n anyw ay. The rated capacity is the new capacity. looks like Vince is correct!!
Vince wrote:
Cool! Thanks for the feedback!
Tony wrote:
Installed w eeks agow orks great! Installing same batteries (2nd new set) in the other pow er pack that originally failed. Saved myself almost $100 on each unit as mfr. w ill not repair and just sells new pow er packs. Batteries are the only thing that fail and both w ith tabs are easily replaced once unit is opened. Mfr. w ould not reply or give me time of day w hen I requested by phone and email the battery specs. But, had to be one of tw o or three battery capacities.
Chris wrote:
Am I damaging my batteries? I see battery charging voltage and operational voltage in the battery specification. Battery charging voltage is 3.65V, Operational voltage is 3.3V. I am charging below this voltage at 3.44V and I see the cell voltages rise quickly initially then slow ly up to 3.45 then suddenly to 3.65V w hen charging shuts off. Is this healthy for an LiFePO4 battery? I notice temperature rises of 2 degree Celsius in the pack. The pack is made up of 16 cells rated at 48V. Am I damaging the cells by letting them go up to 3.65V?
Vince wrote:
Batteries, even rechargeable ones, are disposable items. Asking if youre damaging one is like asking if youre damaging your pencil by using it to w rite a letter. Yes, but thats w hat its meant for. Current can only flow from a higher voltage source into low er voltage. So in order to charge a battery, you must charge it w ith a voltage higher than w hat it is already at. If youre charging your battery at 3.44v, then the battery w ill never be charged above that. If the battery eventually reaches a voltage of 3.65, than at least at some point, it w as being charged w ith at least 3.65v.
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If you keep everything w ithin the manufacturers specifications, it should perform as intended. The intention is not to make them last the longest, but to get the most use from them.
JP wrote:
Hi, i have a Li-ion Battery, 3.7V, 700MAh , and id like to charge it. How can i do w ithout the original charger ? Thank you
Vince wrote:
Hi JP, Any lithium ion charger should w ork fine. You can either buy one or make one. Ive bought a few really cheap ones, and they all suck really bad except for this one: http://w w w .lenmar.com/w eb/ProductDetails.aspx?ProductID=PPUCLIP If you w ant to build your ow n, w ithout starting from scratch, heres probably the easiest kit: http://w w w .adafruit.com/products/1304 Have fun! Vince PS, you could also probably find a stand alone charger built specifically for your particular cell on ebay.
RJ wrote:
Hello, My name is Robert Jones and I am contacting you in reference to Lithium Ion batteries. I am seeking some safety information for these types of batteries. I read your article and understand w here these batteries is subject to overheating and can lead to fire and explosion, but I didnt see anything to prove my case of supplying an eye-w ash show er for personnel if they are exposed to the active materials inside of these units. Also, are there any EPA regulations for these type industrial Lithium Ion batteries? The internal makeup is made up of oxide and lithiated carbon and Im w ondering if there are any supporting documents that states that an eye-w ash show er is required be provided in a Lithium Battery Supply house? Make a long story short, w e are designing a PV system for grid and w e are using/charging industrial Lithium Ion batteries to supply to pow er to the grid and w e couldnt find any supporting documents that states its required to provide an eye w ash for such a system is case of contamination. Your insight w ill be greatly appreciated. RJ
Gabe wrote:
I just built a battery pack to replace one that w as w orn out. The old pack had six cheap Chinese 3000mAh 18650S. I bought six Orbtronic 3400mAh batteries for the new pack but the old charger w ill not charge them. The batteries need to charge simultaneously because they are tab-w elded together. Any suggestions?
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On May 3, 2013 at 9:42am
Vince wrote:
@Randy, Im no expert, but that sounds perfectly reasonable to me! Vince
Ronnie wrote:
I regularly use Li-ion batteries, 650mah and 1300mah. I have tw o chargers one is 100mah the other 420mah, the former takes up to 6 hours to charge a 650mah battery. Can anyone tel me w hich is the safest? Ron
Vince wrote:
It doesnt make any sense that a charger w ould be rated in mah. That w ould be like saying a garden hose is rated for seven gallons. What does that mean? If all other characteristics are the same, a charger that charges slow er is gentler on a battery than one that charges faster.
paola wrote:
Hello, I have a cell phone battery and 1100mAh 3.7 v, I am using it for an application that is not the phone, my question is, if it is necessary to put an electronic circuit to charge the battery or you only have to let the internal circuit battery voltage w ill charge it w ith 5V, how advisable is to do this? .. thanks for your reply
Ronnie wrote:
Of course it makes sense that a charger delivers different mAh. Similarly a 15mm pipe w ill deliver less w ater than 22mm hence pipe sizing formula w hen installing heating systems. I just w ant to know w hich is safest!
Mario wrote:
Paola, some Li-ion cells have built in over charge protection but I w ould never rely on that. To be safe, you need to use a charging circuit that w ould never exceed 4.2V applied to the battery. Ronnie, you have not specified how your chargers w ork, how ever assuming the chargers are designed for Li-ion ie they can handle the initial surge charging current and dont apply more than 4.2v per Li-ion battery then they are both safe. Use the higher current rated charger. One w ord of w arning- if your battery is faulty (they often short out w hen faulty) its like putting a short circuit across your charger. Good chargers w ill shut dow n or current limit but cheap ones may overload and heat up to the point of meltdow n. Check your cells are not shorted before charging ie they measure at least 2.5 volts
Mario wrote:
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Leon, definitely no. Read the info at the top of this page
vagos wrote:
at w hich states do you suggest charging an iphone battery ? plugingi it in at 20% and remove it at 80% is that good ??
Vince wrote:
If the current tapers off to zero as the battery reaches 4v, then how w ould it ever get to 4.2?
Vince wrote:
Ah yes, I misunderstood. I thought you w ere trickle charging it at 4V. Now it makes sense. Thanks.
Luken wrote:
Hi, I just got a new 1600 mah 3.7V Li-ion battery for my phone (instead of the original 1200mah 3.7V). Charging from USB port, it says the battery is immediately full w hen its empty. Using a 5.2V 1200 ma charger nothing happens at all, but this charger w orks on the old 1200mah 3.7V battery. Any reason for this, other than that the new battery simply doesnt w ork?
Luken wrote:
Hi, The original w as also Li-ion, yes.
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green (connected to mains, but not charging).
Phone is completely dead w ith the new battery inserted. When charging the battery from the mains, phone remains dead. Charger light also periodically flashes from red (charging) to
When charging from the USB port, phone charges for about a minute, then gives battery full reading. On disconnecting, the phone quickly loses life and dies. Im confused by the voltage reading on the charger I received as w ell. Perhaps its meant to be 4.2V? Its a 3rd party charger. Seems to charge at a much faster rate, esepecially compared to the USB. But in any event, bearing in mind that the charger w orks on the older low capacity battery, but does nothing w hatsoever to the new w hat w ould your conclusion be from that?
Vince wrote:
@Luken, tw o things: First, this thing you call a charger, does the battery plug into it? Or does it plug into your phone? If the battery plugs into it, and it is putting out 5.2V, then it probably killed your battery. But on the other hand, if it plugs into your phone, then it is not a charger. Its just a pow er source for your phone, and your phone itself is using its ow n built-in charger to charge your battery. Second, w hile I dont know if this is exactly your situation, the symptoms you describe sound consistent w ith a dead battery. The phone, w ith its ow n internal charger, is probably very confused. It thinks the battery is dead because it cant supply enough pow er to make the phone function. But it also thinks the battery is fully charged because it cant accept any more pow er. That is, if the phones charger is putting 4.2V to the battery, but the battery is draw ing 0A of current, then it must be as full as it can get. Its conceivable that the connectors on the outside of the battery arent even connected to the cell itself. (A battery actually contains a tiny circuit board for protection.)
Raton wrote:
if the battery is of 2000 mAh then w hat should be the charger current rating? if the rating is 2000 mAh then w ill it cause any problem ?
Vince wrote:
@Raton, battery capacity is measured in mAh, but current is just amps or milliamps, not milliamp-hours. If a 2000 mAh battery is charged at a constant current of 2000 mA (2A), then it w ould theoretically go from empty to full in one hour. In practice, it w ill take longer because as the capacity starts to get full, the current w ill taper off tow ards zero. But charging that fast is usually considered to be too fast. Id aim for something in the 200ma for a slow charge to 1000ma for a fast charge. Slow er is alw ays better for the battery.
Raton wrote:
w ill it destroy the battery ?? if charger is 1000 ma and battery is 1500mah then w ill there be any prob ??
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On June 21, 2013 at 4:08am
Luken wrote:
Youre right its a pow er source for the phone I w as referring to. Looks like its a dud. Thanks for your help guys.
Vince wrote:
@Raton, batteries are consumable devices, intended to be eventually destroyed by using them. Charging them more slow ly w ill destroy them more slow ly.
Vince wrote:
@Goutam, good questions, and I w ould also like to know the same if anyone know s. Ive been operating under the assumption that a dumb charger is probably fine. The battery itself w ill be limiting the current. As its voltage approaches the voltage of the charger, the current w ill drop, and eventually become zero w hen they are equal.
Jim wrote:
Is there an absolute minimum charging current? I have a small solar panel that provides 12v at 0.2A. I w ant to charge a 14.4Ahr li-ion battery pack. The AC charger that comes w ith provides 12v at 1.2A so I w ould be providing 1/6 the current w ith the solar panel, w ould this hurt anything?
Vince wrote:
Hi Jim, No, there is no minimum. The slow er the current, the longer it w ill take to charge. Your panel w ill just take six times longer to charge the pack, but no problem. How ever, I am in a similar situation, and there is a different problem. It seems that solar panels can be overloaded. As the current being draw n by the charging device approaches the maximum the panel can provide, the voltage drops. This is a particular problem on cloudy days, or in the morning/evening w hen your solar isnt receiving perfect sunlight. As the voltage drops, the w hole system crashes for a second before recovering. But the recovery may only last a fraction of a second, w hich can result in 80% dow ntime. Here is an excellent article on this problem: http://learn.adafruit.com/usb-dc-and-solar-lipoly-charger/design-notes
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This is from a DIY kit for using solar to charge Li-Ion. I have bought and built tw o of them, and can attest to the fact that they do w ork.
Subutay wrote:
What is the max.w orking temparature for li-ion batteries. My battery group contain 4 series 18650 cell group in 10 shunt battery and still temperature raising rapidly to 50 c and termal termostat is cut of the current in midle of the w orking progress.I am not sure the 50 c is correct w orking temperature.
Ping wrote:
0V Lithium polymer battery chargable. When Lithium polymer connected to product. It keeps in standby mode nearly 1 year. The Lithium polymer battery (Without protect circuit) from 3.7V drops below 0.08V. The battery can rechargable ( w ithout protect circuit ) but it prevent by protect circuit. What is problem if charge 0V Lithium polymer battery?
Vince wrote:
Batteries are usually rated at the nominal voltage, w hich is their normal, or average operating voltage. For example, a typical lithium ion cell is 3.7v nominal. It is full at 4.2v and pretty empty at 3.2v. 3.7v is its half w ay point. So in your case, if you use a 25.9v charger to charge a 25.3v battery, you w ill only get it up to about half charge. I dont think it should hurt anything. You just w ont be able to get a full charge out of it, w hich is probably around 29v.
Selvol wrote:
This site has been the greatest non biases source of info around for years. Thank you
Damian wrote:
Hi, Is it possible to trickle charge a Li-ion battery using a portable solar charger? and w ould this damage the battery? Thanks
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Damian wrote:
Hi, can Li-ion batteries be trickle charged via a portable solar charger? and can this cause any damage to the battery? Thanks
Vince wrote:
As long as the charging voltage is correct (usually 4.2V) it w ouldnt matter w hether the source of that voltage is from a phones charger, solar panel, or hamster in a w heel. I have a series of contraptions for charging my batteries. I have a solar panel that outputs 0-15.3 volts depending on solar conditions, w hich in turn pow ers a 12v-5v USB adapter, w hich sends 5v to anything designed to accept 5v, such as a phone or a standalone charger, w hich finally supplies 4.2v to the battery itself. Things to consider w hen using a solar panel: If you overload the panel, trying to draw more current than it can supply, possibly due to cloud cover for example, the solar panel output voltage may crash to zero. This shouldnt cause any harm, except that it w ont charge the battery, and may even drain it. Also, w hile the solar panel must be in direct sunlight, take care to ensure that the charger itself, and the battery, are shaded and have cool. Simply covering them w ith a dark panel may actually cause greater heat.
Bill wrote:
If I put a 1.2V rechargeable battery in series in a 1.2V constant on circuit w ith a load: 1. Will my total voltage be 2.4V ? 2. Would this in effect be a trickle charger for the battery ? 3. Might the battery discharge and, if so, should I use a diode betw een the battery and the incoming 1.2V ? 4. Would it be best to use a Li-Ion, a NiCad, or a NiMH battery ? This is a great site !!! Thanks.
Nestoras wrote:
If i have my mobile phone plug on the charger overnight this w ill cause an overcharge?
Vince wrote:
Charge moves from higher voltage to low er voltage. The only w ay to charge a battery beyond 4.2v is to charge it w ith more than 4.2v.
Nestoras wrote:
Dear Vince, Thank you.
Milap wrote:
I have a problem w ith my li ion battery of my mobile. It charges to 82% in about 2 hours 30 minutes and suddenly w ithin 5 minutes it show s 100%. Same w ith dischargingIt discharges to 30% normally and w ithin 5 minutes it show s 15%. What can be the problem? i keep my phone sw itched off during charging..and charge only after battery reaches 0%.
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I have also replaced the battery but the problem remains.Kindly guide me.
Vince wrote:
The good new s is that you do not have a problem w ith your battery. Its just that your phone does not accurately know the percentage of your charge, so it guesses, usually based on usage. Most phones usually charge the battery at 4.2v. They can frequently (maybe once each second) w atch how much current is going into the battery, and thereby count up how many mah of charge it is up to. And the same process w hen discharging, counting dow n from full how much youve used. You cannot accurately measure the charge left in you battery by looking at its voltage, because there is not a linear relationship. As your battery ages, it is not able to store as much, so the phone may only charge w hat it thinks should be 82% of the batterys capacity, but w hen the battery w ill suddenly not accept any more charge, then it realizes that its at 100%, as full as its going to get. You could try a battery calibration procedure, w hich actually does nothing to the battery, but should help teach the phone w hat the upper and low er limits of the battery are. How ever, w hat youve described yourself already doing is essentially the same thing. Ultimately, it sounds like a phone problem, not a battery problem. Id ignore it, personally, and just remember that 82% means almost full, and 30% means almost dead.
Milap wrote:
But my phone is new . Just 1 month old and I am facing the problem since the first day. Is there a defect in phone?
Vince wrote:
It may be a defect, or it may be a design problem, or it may be normal. Id ask the person you bought it from, or the manufacturer, if all phones of that model behave in that manner. If yes, then thats the w ay that phone w as designed. If no, then it is defective and they should fix it. It almost sounds like it might be basing the reading on voltage, w hich is w hat I have my phone do by using an app called Battery Monitor. By default, it show s 100% at 4.2V, 0% at 3.2V, and is linear in betw een. On a fresh charge up to 4.2V it w ill show 100%, but drop almost instantly as soon as it is unplugged. From there it drops very quickly at first, then spends most of its time around the 60%-40% range, w here it changes very little, then once below 30% it w ill drop very quickly again. I myself just learn to understand w hat these numbers really mean, and dont take them at their face value.
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Luken wrote:
Hi, I just got a new 1600 mah 3.7V Li-ion battery for my phone (instead of the original 1200mah 3.7V). Charging from USB port, it says the battery is immediately full w hen its empty. Using a 5.2V 1200 ma charger nothing happens at all, but this charger w orks on the old 1200mah 3.7V battery. Any reason for this, other than that the new battery simply doesnt w ork? ######### Hi I left this email a few months ago. Your response suggested it w as the battery at fault. But Ive got the provider to send out a new battery, and that didnt w ork either. They have a good rating, and are unlikely to sent me 1 nonw orking battery, let alone 2, w hich w ere both brand new and untouched. So 3 batteries-2 new er 1600mah batteries that dont w ork at all, and one old 1200mah battery that doesnt last a day, w hich Ive been using since. Any suggestions/possible faults other than the battery?
Vince wrote:
Assuming that the battery is good, then it is either empty, full, or somew here in the middle. To find out, leave the battery off the charger for a couple hours, then use a multimeter to measure the voltage betw een the + and - terminals. Anything over 4v is pretty full, and anything under 3.4v is pretty low . 3.7v is nominal, average, half w ay. If the battery is bad, it could read full, and yet not be able to supply enough current to pow er your phone for very long. But w ere assuming that the battery is good. If a good battery is full, but w ont run the phone, then the phone is bad. If a good battery is empty but w ont charge, then the charger is bad. Remember, the charger is either built into the phone, or you may be using an external charger, w hich is a cradle the battery sits in. The pow er cord for the phone is not a charger, only a pow er cord.
Vince wrote:
I dont know anything about solar cars, but Id say that any additional pow er source you provide to the car w ill be that much less that the battery has to provide. I assume your solar source cant provide enough to keep up w ith the demands of the car w hile its in use, or you w ouldnt need a battery. Wouldnt that be nice! So w ithout using any real numbers, lets say a load needs 20 w atts, and a charger can only provide 10 w atts, then for every hour you use the device, it w ould take tw ice as long to recharge it. But if youre applying the source and the battery together, then the device can get 10 of its required w atts from the solar, and now the battery only has to provide 10 more, and so you can use the device for tw ice as long before the battery is empty, at w hich time the device w ould try to get all its pow er from the solar source, w hich cant provide enough, and youre dead in the w ater until you recharge.
Vince wrote:
I should also mention, and probably you already know , that I didnt take into account the different voltages involved, and so you w ould need some circuitry to make things like they need to be. For example, a typical laptop computer pow er cord supplies 19v. But the battery may only be an 11v battery. So obviously the pow er management thingy in the computer has to make sure the proper voltage goes to the proper destination.
Ian wrote:
By laptop battery (lithium ion) does not charge beyond 93% w hich is ok w ith me but w hen it discharges to 26% pow er goes as if it had reached 0. Why is this, can anything be done to correct it?
Vince wrote:
As you use batteries, they lose some of their capacity. Your laptop isnt aw are of the batterys diminished capacity. Some laptops allow you a calibrate the laptop for the battery, basically by going through a full charge and discharge cycle, w hile the laptop monitors the charging and discharging process to learn w hat the batterys capacity is. This calibration function is usually found in the BIOS, if it exists. Many laptops dont have any means for recalibration. Alternately, you can just learn and remember for yourself that 93% means full and 26% means empty. Also you may be able to reconfigure the pow er options through the Control Panel. For example, you might tell it to display an alarm at 30%, and then go to sleep mode.
batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/charging_lithium_ion_batteries
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Lastly, you can buy a new battery on ebay, usually for under $20.
angelica wrote:
Whats the difference betw een a protected and unprotected battery? If Im making various serie/parallel conection w hats best? Also If i decide to use a PCB battery, its best is a buy unprotected batteries and use PCB board or its best to buy cells w ith the PCB include??
Vince wrote:
From the w ebsite batteryjunction.com, Li-Ion and Li-Poly battery packs should alw ays be used w ith a protection circuit to prevent the cell from over charging or over dis-charging. Choosing the correct circuit and applying it appropriately is vital to the longevity your batteries and your ow n safety. All of the batteries Ive bought have come w ith PCBs (Protection Circuit Boards). Even if youre making your ow n battery of batteries, Id recommend using individual PCBs on the individual batteries. Whether you w ant to buy w ith the PCB or add your ow n probably depends on your level of expertise.
Kevin wrote:
Hey Vince Thanks for the useful info. I just have one question: I know you said its better to turn off the device w hen charging to prevent parasitic load. But lets say Im at home and w ant to w atch netflix on my phone, or w ork on it for a few hours, and Im close to a charger. Is it better to keep my phone connected to prevent battery drain, or is it better to just use the battery and charge later?
Kevin wrote:
Hey Vince Thanks for the useful info. I just have one question: I know you said its better to turn off the device w hen charging to prevent parasitic load. But lets say Im at home and w ant to w atch netflix on my phone, or w ork on it for a few hours, and Im close to a charger. Is it better to keep my phone connected to prevent battery drain, or is it better to just use the battery and charge later?
Vince wrote:
A reminder to all: I am not in any w ay related w ith this w ebsite, the original article, or the author thereof. Im just a normal reader like the rest of you. Any advice or information in the original article didnt come from me. @Kevin, Ive thought about this myself. I go through a lot of batteries, because I use them and abuse them. I normally prefer the convenience of not being plugged in. How ever, in response to your question about w hats better for the battery, I think maybe its best to have it plugged in w hile youre using it the heaviest. Whats absolutely best for the battery? According to w hat Ive read, charge it up to about half w ay, maybe 3.7-3.8 volts, remove the battery, sit it on a shelf, and dont use it. Maybe once a year, check it and charge it back up a little if needed. This w ill probably make it last the most number of years, because youre not using it. Thats not practical in the real w orld. We buy them to use them. So w hats the next best thing? Dont use them any more than you have to. So if the pow er being draw n out of the battery is the same as w hat w ould be going in to it w hen charging, then they cancel each other out, and essentially youre not using the battery, and your phone is basically running directly off of w all pow er. I think probably the best thing in this scenario is to put it on the slow est charger you can find, such as a computers USB port w hich is limited to 500 mA (0.5A). A perfect example is w hen Im on the road, running the GPS w ith the screen on continuously, w hile streaming internet radio in the background. Ive noticed that I can drive all day long and never get a full charge, even though its plugged in. So in this case, Im using zero charging cycles. If this seems contradictory to the advice about parasitic load, let me add this: Any load, parasitic or otherw ise, w ill increase the time needed to achieve full charge. But once it is fully charged, a smart charger w ill stop charging all together until the voltage drops dow n to a predetermined sw itch back on level, maybe 4.0v for example. If the phone is on and youre not using it, this w ill result in unnecessary charge/discharge cycles. So if you dont need to use it w hile its charging, overnight for example, then yes, its best to turn it off.
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