I understand that the first line means, that the battery will always give 3.7V (at least in theory) at its output terminal. Also the battery will last for 1 hour if the mobile circuitry draw 1000mA. Contact online >>
I understand that the first line means, that the battery will always give 3.7V (at least in theory) at its output terminal. Also the battery will last for 1 hour if the mobile circuitry draw 1000mA.
The second line means that under no circumstances I should increase the input charging voltage beyond 4.2V, else it might damage the battery.
Is my understanding correct? If I am correct I would like to know for this battery what is the minimum required voltage for charging?
Technically the minimum amount of voltage for charging will be anything above the current state of charge. But that''s probably not the answer you''re looking for, from Lithium-ion battery on Wikipedia:
Lithium-ion is charged at approximately 4.2 ± 0.05 V/cell except for "military long life" that uses 3.92 V to extend battery life. Most protection circuits cut off if voltage greater than 4.3 V or temperature greater than 90 °C is reached. Below 2.50 V/cell the battery protection circuit may render the battery unchargeable with regular charging equipment. Most battery circuits stop at 2.7–3.0 V/cell.
So to achieve a full state of charge you''d normally want to aim at 4.2V. In practice charging Li-Ion safely and efficiently does involve quite a few steps so you may want to look at a dedicated charger chip. You''d need to check the datasheets for any that look of interest but many will operate properly with a supply voltage only a little above 4.2V.
To safely charge a lithium ion battery, you need to follow the correct charging procedure, which involves a constant-current phase followed by a constant-voltage phase. If you just use a constant-voltage source, you''ll end up charging the battery faster than it''s designed to cope with.
For instance, here''s a datasheet for one particular model of li-ion battery. To fully charge the battery, you need to eventually get it up to 4.2V. But if you just apply a 4.2V across it when it''s completely discharged, you''ll be putting 4.2V-2.75V=1.45V across a 130mOhm impedance. That means the charging current will be on the order of 10 amps, which is much higher than the battery is rated for. It''s specified with a maximum charging rate of "1C" or enough current to fully charge the battery in one hour, which in this case is 1.1A.
You need to actively limit the charging current by reducing the voltage, until the battery is sufficiently charged to self-limit. If you can''t find a datasheet for the exact model of battery that you''re using, you should err on the side of caution and charge it very slowly. Lithium-ion batteries are prone to catching fire or exploding if abused.
This is not an area I have much experience in, but I guess it depends on the internal resistance of the battery.
You could try to apply a small charging voltage to the battery, as small as you like, and then measure how much current flows into the battery. If current is flowing into the battery, it should be charging (minus some current which is wasted as heat in the charging process).
The current you can charge the battery with will depend on how charged the battery already is. I.e. if the battery is fully discharged, you can probably charge it with a very small voltage, but if it is almost fully charged, you will need a larger voltage. My intuition tells me that you will have to apply at least 3.7V if you want to charge the battery fully.
Again I am no expert in this area, so above is just my speculation. :)
Taking into consideration the other answers, I will limit my self to just answering the OP questions. 1 - Yes, your understanding is correct. 2 - The minimum voltage required to charge a 3.7v Li-Ion battery (to 3.7v), is 3.7v. A more practical voltage would be, 4.0v (3.7 < 4.0 < 4.2). A more "realistic" example of the second part of the first sentence would be 10 hours at 100mA.
No, the battery does constantly not give 3.7V. This is the voltage value at a way lower capacity.3.7V does not means much. That is the value at which the battery is most stable at, but the actual value when fully charged is 4.2V, so a charger will have to provide higher than this if you want to fully charge it.
At 3.3V standard Li-Ion cells are considered discharged because they can no longer provide enough sustained current for the average applications they were designed for.
The minimum voltage for charging a standard Li-Ion is 4.201V. But considering impedances of the charger and cell, most chargers have 4.25 or even 4.3V when running blank (not connected to a cell).
Although those values have been chosen this way they are not like the 10 commandments. You can discharge a cell under 3.3V but it will provide less current and you can charge it even up to 4.3+V and it will have higher capacity, but both practices will lower its lifetime.
So in emergency cases, overcharge them to 4.3V and you''ll have some extra capacity to work with and if you want to have a very long time for a cell, let it charge only up to 4V but that will only provide ~80% of the stated capacity.
Option 1: 4.0V - safe mode - for safe charging and long life and overdischarged/bad cell recovery.
Option 3: 4.32V - overpower - over-charge mode (lower cell life, very high danger for reduced capacity cells)
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Nowadays you may also be able to purchase 4.35V cells! These are the latest chemistry, they have a little more power as indicated by the voltage being higher than 4.2V. They tend to be cylinder lithium ion''s used for laptop batteries, and lights so its not terribly likely you''ll just run into one unless you''re looking for it.
Make sure when you''re buying batteries and chargers to match them up! Overcharging a 3.6V battery by attaching it to a 4.2V battery charger can at the very least permanently damage your battery and at worst cause a fire!
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