If I charge a LiIon 500 mA 3.7 V battery with a charger that has a 100 mA power only, the battery will be charged in a longer time or not charged at all ?
Thanks in advance to solve this doubt.
Enrico
If I charge a LiIon 500 mA 3.7 V battery with a charger that has a 100 mA power only, the battery will be charged in a longer time or not charged at all ?
Thanks in advance to solve this doubt.
Enrico
Hello Enrico!
First off, the rating of mA on the battery is the max discharge rate.
Secondly, the LiIon battery has to be charged with a monitoring and balance charger built specifically for LiIon batteries. Please "DO NOT" use just any power source to charge any batteries. LiPoly's. NiMh, NiCad, etc. all require specific types of chargers and methods. The charger will ask to set the voltage due to the balancing feature if the battery has multiple cells or just one. It will also ask for the mH of the battery pack. This is also to charge at a specific rate that is required for that type of cell.
Lastly, the rating on the power source is also the max power output rating.
Side note: If you want to get the most out of your battery packs look up "Storage Voltage" of that type of cell. When you want to put them on the shelf for a while, make sure you bleed them down or charge them up to that voltage to make them last or they will go bad on the shelf.
Hello Enrico!
First off, the rating of mA on the battery is the max discharge rate.
Secondly, the LiIon battery has to be charged with a monitoring and balance charger built specifically for LiIon batteries. Please "DO NOT" use just any power source to charge any batteries. LiPoly's. NiMh, NiCad, etc. all require specific types of chargers and methods. The charger will ask to set the voltage due to the balancing feature if the battery has multiple cells or just one. It will also ask for the mH of the battery pack. This is also to charge at a specific rate that is required for that type of cell.
Lastly, the rating on the power source is also the max power output rating.
Side note: If you want to get the most out of your battery packs look up "Storage Voltage" of that type of cell. When you want to put them on the shelf for a while, make sure you bleed them down or charge them up to that voltage to make them last or they will go bad on the shelf.
Hi Jon,
thank you for the warning. This is something I almost know but unfortunately I am not a big expert (nor a small ) in the calculation of the battery systems. I'll try to be more specific.
The battery is the following in the image below, with the listed characteristics:
LiPo rechargeable battery, 500mA/h, 3.7 V, 48x20x4 mm dimensions
I plan to use a coil inductance recharger like the one shown in the image below:
Generating an output regulated voltage of 3.7 or 5V with 100-300 mA power and - as far as I know (declared by the producer) it should charge single-cells LiPo batteries.
Enrico
I could see charging single cells. Just keep in mind that there is a percentage charge rate. The voltage is most important as far as fully charging the battery. Even that voltage is a certain amount of the rating of the battery cells.
As far as the rate of charge (Amperage) it needs to be a certain amount of the discharge rate. It has been a while so I can't remember off hand what that is on certain cells but a quick Google can get you that info.
Basically it works like this:
Charge rate = % of discharge rate (mAh) and cell type
Top off charge (Full charge) = voltage + but not more than a certain percentage over voltage capacity of the cell type
With the type of of charging you are asking about you will need to regulate the voltage and charge rate. The closer you get to max charge rate the faster it will charge but you risk damaging the cell and it does shorten the life of the cell the closer you get also. Another words the slower (The lower the charge rate) the better it is for the cell. Like most things heat is the enemy. The faster the charge the more heat generated. ;-)
Hope this helps...
Balancing is only needed when multiple cells are charged. This is because a cell which is carged to a lower voltage is the charged by an other cell with higher voltage and the current is not limited. A to hig charge current will destroy the battery cell. That's why you have to do balancing while charging multiple cells.
I accidentally left out where the left out the part that a balance charger will also charge it at the correct rate and top it off properly. ;-)
Think of the balancer charging individual cells sequentially. Than all of the above applies. Reality might not be as simple. To correctly answer your question I'll have to dig deeper myself...